Closer: A Novella (4 page)

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Authors: Dannika Dark

BOOK: Closer: A Novella
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“It’s
my
head; I should know what it looks like.”

Kane looked around. “Lady, you sure have an empty head.”

She narrowed her eyes. “Oh, I’d love to see what’s in
yours
. Empty beer cans and adult magazines?”

“I don’t read porn,” he growled.

She smirked triumphantly. “So you’re not denying the beer.”

Few women had the ability to ruffle his feathers and she more than ruffled them, she plucked them out one at a time.

Her eyes lowered to the ends of his tattered jeans. “Why did you take off your shoes? It’s too cold in here to be wandering around in a pair of socks.”

“Can you wake up?” he asked.

She suddenly jerked her arm back and Kane lurched forward, losing his balance. He almost grabbed her dress and tore it off as he fell to his knees.

Women shouldn’t have such short tempers
, he thought.

“I have a whole arsenal of imagination on hand,” she threatened. “Don’t get any ideas, because I can make this unpleasant for you. If I could wake up, I would have already done it, don’t you think?”

Kane dragged his eyes up the length of her body. He took his time doing it too. Long, silky legs disappeared beneath her thin dress and he imagined himself wrapping his hands around her narrow waist. The fact that she wasn’t wearing a bra beneath her dress didn’t escape his attention; it was enough to titillate the male mind. He’d never seen such beautiful skin—it just glowed.

When their eyes met, she sucked in a sharp breath and her cheeks turned a deep shade of pink. Man, if
that
wasn’t enough to make him shift uncomfortably on his knees. He got that look a lot because of his smoldering eyes—the kind that could undress a woman thread by thread until she was blushing and naked. Only now, Kane was the one who felt like blushing. She intimidated him with the way her body immediately responded to his gaze.

“What’s your name?” he asked her in a voice that was hoarser than it should have been.

She didn’t respond. Her tawny brown hair tumbled forward and framed her cunning face. Kane had never felt so exposed by a woman’s gaze.

“Well, if you won’t tell me your name, then why do I smell cookies? Are you really so bored in here that you’re baking?”

A change blossomed in her expression and all the anger withered away, replaced by an emotion he couldn’t read. “You can smell that?” she breathed.

He nodded, remaining on the floor. She seemed less intimidated by him in a submissive position and he wasn’t in the mood to fight off another frying pan attack.

Kane involuntarily smacked his lips, not realizing that the fragrance of sweets had awakened his hunger. He swallowed hard when he noticed that her eyes were fixed on his mouth.

“Do you have any family that I can call?”

She slowly shook her head and appeared fragile—like one of those little glass ballerinas on display in the gift shops. “How do you know about the cookies?”

Enough of this shit
.

Kane shot up to his feet and glared down his nose. “Peanut butter cookies, to be exact. Give me the phone number of a relative and I’ll call them to come get you. Maybe they know a Relic or someone more qualified than me to pick your convoluted brain.”

A baseball bat appeared in her right hand and tapped against the white marble floor.

“I was thinking about my grandma,” she murmured. “But no one has ever…”

Kane jerked her hand to snap her out of whatever fog she was in. “Friends?”

“No, we’re
not
,” she replied sharply, brown eyes narrowing to slivers as she looked defiantly up at him.

“What I mean is do you
have
any? I’m guessing by the way you give introductions with a fucking cast iron skillet, that the answer is no. If you raise that bat, I’m not going to play nice,” he warned.

Her voice raised a pitch. “Well, if your definition of
playing nice
is feeling up a helpless woman—”

“Helpless?” He snorted. “Lady, you’re about as helpless as a rabid porcupine.”

That’s the last thing Kane remembered.

Chapter 3

 

When he awoke on the floor beside the bed, it was with one hell of a sore face
. Yet, it was the blow to his ego that hurt more than his eye. He’d been in his fair share of fights, but had never once gone down for the count. That woman could have been a prizefighter.

After working the kink out of his neck, Kane got up and went into the living room. It didn’t appear that Mr. Butcher had entertained visitors very often, judging by the deplorable condition of his house. The plastic cup on the coffee table contained black mold floating on top of whatever liquid it once contained. He sat on the squeaky sofa and leaned forward, glaring at the porno magazine beneath a dirty plate with dried ketchup smears. The page that was dog-eared had a woman strapped to a bed with tape over her mouth. Kane turned his eyes away and twisted a clump of hair between his fingers.

Maybe the best thing to do was to just leave her and call the cops. Kane tightened his lips and shook his head. If they found out that she wasn’t human, they’d turn her over to a bunch of scientists to play with.

“Shit.”

Abandoning her was out of the question. He wouldn’t be responsible for putting this woman in the hands of some Pulitzer Prize winning wannabe.

Kane absently tugged at his earlobe and looked around. The walls had a yellowish tint—probably from the cigar smoke. In front of the small television was one of those green swivel chairs that looked like a garage-sale purchase. A huge stack of DVD cases filled a bookshelf next to the television. He remembered the duct tape on the kitchen counter and didn’t want to imagine what was on those videos.

Kane’s gloved finger traced along a rip in the knee of his jeans and he shivered when the air conditioner kicked on. Everything about the house was frigid, like an empty grave.

He muttered a curse while rubbing his sore jaw. Stealing the car had been a royally stupid idea and now he was trapped inside a serial killer’s house. He couldn’t call a cab because the last of his money was sitting inside a paper bag by the newspaper stand.

The fabric of his thick socks stretched when he wiggled his toes. Kane suddenly remembered the comment she’d made about it being cold in there. He sprang up and crossed the room to a thermostat mounted on the wall beside a faded photograph of an old woman. Duct tape held the box together. When he slid the lever five degrees warmer, the air immediately shut off. He wandered into the bedroom with the hall light shining in from behind.

Dirt covered the soles of her feet. The thought of what that sadistic animal had done to her burned like a hot coal in his stomach. Why would any man inflict that kind of cruelty on a woman for his own pleasure? It disgusted him, especially knowing that most Breed were far more protective of women than humans seemed to be.

He flexed his ungloved hand and draped a thin blanket over her slender legs. How could someone so feminine have so much fight in her? He’d never seen such an angelic face—she glowed, and he thought about how radiant she must have looked in the sunlight.

The bleeding had finally stopped—a good sign. Head wounds could be messy if they were deep enough. Kane knew this because after a night of drinking when he was twenty, he’d wound up on the receiving end of a wine bottle held by one pissed off Mage. The bartender had thrown them both out and Kane ended up on the list—the one that all Breed places keep of people who break the rules about fighting on the premises. Some turned a blind eye if they were paid enough, but most of them didn’t give a shit who you were.

Stitches were definitely in her future.

An idea crossed his mind and he sat beside her on the bed, stripping away his left glove.

“Let’s see you take a swing at me this time,” he said with a smirk. Kane held
both
of her hands—nice and tight.

When his eyes snapped open, one pissed off woman was turning her mouth to the side. It wrinkled up her lips in the most amusing way and he flashed a devilish grin at her as she tried to free her hands.

“No more hitting,” he said in a serious voice. “What’s your name?” Kane noticed in his peripheral vision that she was slowly tapping the toe of her shoe against the floor. His lip twitched.

“Pocahontas.”

“Well, in that case, it looks like I’ve captured me a squaw.”

“How’s your face?” she asked, shifting her hip in a way that caught his eye.

Kane sniffed out a laugh. “As handsome as ever.”

She rolled her eyes and blew a strand of hair away from her face.

“Let’s sit down,” he suggested, already moving to sit Indian style and pulling her down with him. It was too awkward to stand there like a couple of school kids holding hands. This way, they were at eye level, not to mention that he wouldn’t have to dodge her temperamental knee.

She reluctantly followed his lead, sitting on her left leg. “Why didn’t I just die?”

His breath caught unexpectedly at the vulnerable bend in her voice. Her brown eyes turned sadly to the floor and Kane immediately regretted the harsh words he’d said to her. This was just a girl who’d gotten herself mixed up with the wrong guy—her anger and fear were understandable.

“What’s your Breed?” he asked in a thick voice.

“Sensor.”

He almost broke the link. “You don’t transmit like a Sensor; I’m not picking up anything.”

“That’s because I’m defective,” she said, averting her eyes.

Clearly, it was a sensitive topic, but he’d heard of such things before. Some of them were dead receptors, unable to collect emotions. Some could transmit, but with only a vague awareness of the quality, so there were a lot of pissed off buyers. Intolerance was an unfortunate reality among Breed when it came to imperfections.

Kane relaxed his grip and lowered his voice. “Defective in what way?”

Her fingers flexed, but it only tightened their grip. “Meaning I’m a dead transmitter—a one-way channel.” Her jaw punched out, as if daring Kane to make fun of her. She didn’t appear to be ashamed of it, just used to the intolerance. “I can pick up emotions all I want, but there’s no point. No one can feel
me
,” she said, stressing the last word.

That was a big deal, too. Kane knew the disdain she must have faced in the bedroom when the men discovered the sex wasn’t going to meet their standards. It was something he strongly related to since most Sensors didn’t give him the time of day when they found out that he wouldn’t share. Sex was another little perk when it came to their gifts because they would exchange the experience during the act. You could feel each other’s pleasure and it intensified the rush.

He sighed, compelled to tell his own story. “I’m… I don’t know how to explain this.” Kane was about to spring something personal on a woman he’d just met—something that he didn’t talk about with others. “I can’t handle touching anyone. I pick up way too much shit and can’t shut myself off from drowning in it.”

“That’s the first thing you learn to do as a child,” she said in disbelief.

His voice became abrasive at her remark and he started putting up his wall again. “Well, no one ever taught me. I’ve heard about Sensors being able to disconnect from the emotions—”

“Not disconnect,” she corrected. “It’s learning how to desensitize yourself so you don’t become overwhelmed. It’s kind of like a numbing agent during the exchange. Why didn’t your parents show you how to do this?”

“Are you going to tell me your name or do I get the honor of making one up for you? Because I have a few words in mind if you want to hear them,” he chided.

Her luminous eyes nailed him to the ground. “It’s Caroline. But I don’t go by that; everyone calls me Carrie.”

A lump formed in his throat and desire consumed his body like a raging inferno. How could a name elicit such an intense reaction? The kind that made his heart stammer in his chest to the point where he coughed to make sure it was still beating. The unanticipated attraction he suddenly felt for her startled him. The softness of her small hands linking them together and the intensity of her gaze filled his chest with warmth.

Kane lifted his eyes and his anger crumbled away. “Caroline,” he whispered. “That’s pretty.”

She turned her head to the side and parted her lips, touching her chin to her bare shoulder. Passion filled Caroline’s face—the kind he only saw on a woman when he buried himself deep inside her and she came undone.

Then again, maybe he was just misreading her.

***

 

How do you politely tell someone to get the hell out of your head?
Carrie was having a difficult enough time dealing with her situation, let alone having to contend with a stranger forcing his way inside her mind.

Kane wasn’t deterred when she lashed out at him more than once; he kept coming back for more. She was still shaken from the assault and his unexpected appearance put a fright into her.

But it wasn’t until he said her name that the anger dissipated. His tone was so intimate that she had to look away. There was a craving in his voice that made her feverish, a thickness in his timbre that filled her arms with goose bumps.

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