chapter Two
Several drinks and a delicious, normal meal later, we wandered out of the restaurant, smiling. He had my hand clasped in the crook of his elbow, and I had enough drinks in me—and good conversation—to let him.
I found myself liking Beau quite a bit more than I should have. It was a mistake, through and through, but when he smiled down at me, I got a little weak in the knees and even weaker in resolve.
He was supernatural, I kept reminding myself. That meant bad news for Sara, bad news for me. He was everything I was supposed to avoid. Dating Beau meant Alliance politics I couldn’t even begin to understand, mortal enemies (every supe had them), and all kinds of complications. As a human on the fringes, I knew my fair share about how their secret society operated, but there were levels that I’d never be privy to. For all I knew, the guy turned into a ravening, man-eating cougar at the full moon.
Suspicious, I glanced up at the sky. No full moon.
Everything about the setup of our date told me to run away, and run away fast. But he was charming, and funny, and incredibly sexy. He listened to everything I said with an interested look on his face. I could talk about the bizarre goings-on at Giselle’s office and knew that he’d understand because he was part of the Alliance. It was seductively freeing, even more so when he chuckled at my anecdotes.
I also learned a bit about him. Beau was the eldest child of his family and had three younger brothers. His dad had died when he was eighteen, and his mother lived in California with her second husband—a were-lion. He loved his clan. He was the head of the Paranormal Alliance and owned a large security firm staffed by shifters.
He was … nice. I liked him. I couldn’t like him, though. Sara was in danger if I allowed my feelings for someone—especially a supe—to come between us. I was her shield to the world.
Lost in thought, I was quiet as we walked out of the restaurant. Neither of us spoke, but he still had my arm in his, possessive. A taxi stand was just down the street.
He started to steer me away from the taxi line and toward the restaurant’s private parking lot, and my happy, almost-bubbling mood dissipated. I stopped. “I think it’s time for me to head home.”
“Want to go have a nightcap somewhere?” His hand slid over my shoulder.
I slid it right back off again. His hand was very warm and felt great on my bare skin, but I wouldn’t let that sway me. “I’m not going to the hotel with you.”
His lips quirked. “I won’t lie—I would love to get you into my bed. But I was thinking more along the lines of a drink. Or coffee, if you’d rather.”
Sure, and I was just whistling Dixie. “I’ll pass, thanks.” I pulled away and turned toward the cab stand.
When a cab pulled up, Beau opened the door.
Before I could get into it, however, he shut the door. Irritated, I slapped his arm lightly. “What are you—”
“Shhh,” he said, turning back toward me. His eyes were slitted like a cat’s, gleaming yellow-green and reflecting light.
I stared at him, openmouthed in surprise. His nostrils flared slightly as he sniffed the air, searching for something. I wanted to ask him what was wrong, but I remembered his request for quiet and obeyed.
He blinked and the unnatural shine faded from his eyes, his pupils a regular size once more. Then he looked down at me. “Don’t take the cab.”
“Why?” I glanced over at the waiting taxi, unnerved.
He pulled me closer to him in a protective grasp and led me back down the sidewalk. “The cab driver smelled like … like alcohol.”
Something about his statement rang false. I remembered the way his eyes had gleamed, as if he’d been hunting prey. “Uh-huh.”
“I’ll take you home. How far are we from your place?”
“About twenty minutes,” I said.
“Got a roommate?”
“My sister,” I said, wariness returning. “Why?”
“Good.” He handed me his cell phone. “Call her and tell her you will be home in twenty-five minutes, and to call the police if not.”
That seemed trustworthy enough. I took the phone from him and dialed my home number. Sara answered on the second ring, and I could hear her computer game blasting in the background. “Hello?”
“It’s me,” I said, my eyes on Beau. He watched me calmly, his hands in his pockets. He didn’t seem like he was setting me up, at least. “I’m still out with Mr. Russell. He’s driving me home, so I’ll be there in twenty-five minutes.”
“All right,” she said slowly, and I couldn’t tell if she had picked up on my anxiety. I needed to tell her about the other wolves we’d seen tonight, the veiled references he’d made. Maybe we needed to move again.
“Tell her that if we’re not there on time, to call the police,” he said, misunderstanding my awkward silence.
I parroted it back into the phone, feeling a bit like an overly paranoid freak. He was being so calm and easy about this.
“I guess I don’t need to tell you that Giselle just called and gave you a late assignment?” Sara said, reciting the excuse we’d agreed upon in case the date went badly and I had to exit fast. She dropped her voice into a whisper. “He must be cute.”
Oh, jeez. Had my were-cougar date heard that? I glanced over at my date and saw his mouth curl into a faint smile.
“Very cute,” he agreed.
I nearly died of embarrassment. “Look, twenty-five minutes, okay? Will you keep track?”
“Sure,” she said, yawning. “I’ll start an egg timer or something. You two kids have fun.”
I hung up and handed him the phone back, disgruntled. Sara wasn’t taking this seriously, and Beau had just heard the entire conversation, thanks to supernatural hearing. “We have twenty-five minutes,” I announced.
“I know,” he said. “We’ll be there in fifteen.”
“You’re very confident in yourself.”
“I am,” he agreed. “I know what I want, and I get what I want.” He gave me a pointed look.
I ignored it. “All right then. I’ll get in the car as long as you tell me what you smelled back there.”
He hesitated. “A shifter. I know you don’t want to be seen with me, so I thought it might be best if we took my car.”
That made sense, and I felt relieved that he’d been so quick to catch that. “Thank you.”
He simply grinned at me.
Beau’s car was a Viper. I nearly melted at the sight of it. The valet at the parking lot had the same expression I did—he looked loath to hand the keys over to Beau.
I ran my hand along the hard top as he opened my door to let me in. The inside was cramped, but posh—just what I expected for this kind of car. It was amazing that a tall man like Beau could fit in the car. I eyed the size of the seats. Pretty much in the clear, here. This was a date-rape-safe car—there just wasn’t room for that sort of thing.
He slid into the car next to me and paused, his eyes flashing that odd color again for a moment.
“What is it?” I asked.
He shook his head. “Nothing. Just me being paranoid.”
The drive home was a brief one. I’d considered not giving him my home address, but Sara knew he was taking me home, and we had his information on file at work. If there was one thing that the Alliance didn’t cater to, it was killers and lawbreakers. They were extremely careful to keep up appearances, and someone who couldn’t follow the basic rules of normal society was usually “disposed of” pretty readily.
Kind of like the mafia, but a little hairier and with less garlic.
About fifteen minutes later we pulled into the driveway of the small suburban house Sara and I rented. I saw her part the drapes and look out the window. She saw the car and I raised a hand to let her know it was me.
She nodded and pulled the curtains shut again, giving Beau and me privacy.
I wanted to stay in his company for a few minutes more, but part of me was on edge. My mind was stewing with Tony’s appearance tonight, my thoughts full of wolves and Sara’s safety … and I couldn’t stop thinking about Beau’s smile and when his fingers had brushed my palm earlier.
But I’d accepted my role as my sister’s protector a long time ago, and it didn’t leave room for a man in my life, especially one with a tail.
Beau put an arm behind my shoulders and I stiffened, but he only toyed with a lock of hair that had escaped my bun, his fingers brushing against my neck in a small motion that sent shivers down my spine.
“I had a nice time tonight,” he said.
Lord, he was gorgeous. His dark brown hair looked inky black in the darkness, his eyes pale. “Listen, Beau—”
He laid a finger over my mouth, silencing me before I could shoot him down.
“Shh,” he said, not perturbed in the slightest at my reluctance. “The week is young, Bathsheba. There’s plenty of time. I have until Saturday before things get desperate.”
“I don’t follow you.”
He tilted his head, eyes gleaming in the moonlight. “How so?”
“You call the agency and demand a date—any date. And when you decide you don’t want to date a harpy, a vampire, a doppelganger, or anything else I can pull up on file, you ask for a stand-in. Me.” I threw my hands up in the air. “And now you’re saying it’s okay, because we have time until Saturday. What does Saturday have to do with anything?”
He stared at me, and then he laughed.
I crossed my arms over my chest, feeling wounded and embarrassed. “What’s so darn funny?”
“I thought you knew. I figured someone in your line of work would guess …” He smiled. “I have to say that this puts a new spin on things.”
“What are you talking about?”
He leaned in close, setting my pulse to thrumming hard, and I instinctively leaned back.
“I’m going into heat,” he said.