The Strip (26 page)

Read The Strip Online

Authors: Heather Killough-walden,Gildart Jackson

BOOK: The Strip
8.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Charlie sighed and lowered her arm. Malcolm Cole. She closed her eyes and called up his image in her mind. He was tall and hard and had the kind of face that model agencies would kill to sign; chiseled, strong, and manly. Then there were those eyes. Those
damned
eyes! They ate her up inside. Every time she was near him, he ignited something within her. In the club, when they’d first met, on the sidewalk when she’d run from him, in the car after escaping Phelan and his warlock, and even out in the main room of the hotel’s suite, his gaze had done her in. While surrounded by Lily Kane and men who were apparently members of Cole’s pack, the British werewolf’s very presence had caused Charlie’s stomach to tighten, her chest to feel strangely heavy, and her pulse to race. She’d actually experienced a bit of dizziness.

Lord, he made her hot. And wet....

And she knew that he knew it, too.

It wasn’t fair. It was senseless. How could she be thinking about him at a time like this? The world was spinning out of control! Far too much was happening!

Gabriel Phelan had murdered her parents. The gods only knew what he wanted to do with her as well. He was still out there somewhere, along with that warlock, Seth and his red, glowing eyes and sharp, white fangs.

And Jessie was a
werewolf!

That one, she had a hard time wrapping her head around. She knew in her heart that Jessie hadn’t meant to hurt her. He would never willingly or knowingly hurt her. Not really. But when he’d drawn her into his arms on the green at the Silverstone golf course, her immediate, knee-jerk reaction had been to pull away – to escape the sudden pain that his touch had caused.

It wasn’t as bad as Gabriel’s had been – nowhere near as bad. But it was icing on her pain cake and she’d known what it meant. She’d been so stunned, so caught off guard. How many years had she known him? How close were they?

She’d even slept with him. He’d touched her in ways that she had never let any other man touch her. And all that time, he had been something more than human.

Had he been able to smell her when she was turned on? Could he smell her fear? Had he been able to hear her heart beat? What else did he know about her that she hadn’t told him? And
why
?
Why
was he a werewolf? Why was a werewolf her best friend? What did he want?

In the end, she had needed her best friend’s touch. She’d needed the solidness of him, to know that he was there, and to feel the familiar safeness that always wrapped around her when he held her secure in his arms. So, she’d ducked her head into his chest and forced herself to ignore the pain.

She was getting used to it, anyway.

She shook her head now, as if to clear it. She sighed and opened the door of the bathroom. Beyond, a lush private room awaited and new clothes were draped over the end of the king-sized bed. They had been purchased for her at the forum shops beneath Caesar’s palace. Lily had picked them out. Lily had excellent taste, as far as Charlie was concerned. There were Lucky jeans, and an Ed Hardy T-shirt; Ed Hardy was big in Vegas. A Victoria’s Secret lace bra and panties joined the outfit, along with a new pair of slip-on Converse sneakers. Charlie smiled and picked up the shoes, always happy to receive a new pair. She turned them over to find what she knew she would find there. A Christian Audigier signature.

Definitely
big in Vegas.

She put the shoes back down and began to dress. As she did, her thoughts once more wandered.

Her friends were alive and she was out of Phelan’s grasp for now, but there was a wealth of Big Bad waiting outside her proverbial door. All she had to do was mistakenly unlock it, and she would be trampled under Evil’s foot in its race to subjugate her world.

Any sane person in her situation would believe they’d gone mad at this point. Sanity was a fickle thing sometimes, here today and quietly ushered away tomorrow. But Charlie had lost that gentle, complacent sanity long ago. The majority of the submissive logic that was so easily waylaid by a changing world and things “not dreamt of in our philosophy” had slipped away from Charlie when she was twelve years old. It had drifted off on a silent wind as Charlie stood with her godmother in a vast cemetery wearing a yellow dress because it had been her mother’s favorite color. The rest had gone missing over the last forty-eight hours, and she knew that she would never see it again.

What was left in its place was a toughness that most people only dreamed about. It was a kind of hard-rock, diamond-edged acceptance that realized the world was not as two-dimensional as we are lead to believe, and that just because you’d never seen something didn’t mean it wasn’t real.

Charlie took the towel out of her hair, pulled on her new jeans, and slipped on her shoes. Then she made her way to the window and looked out through new, wiser eyes at the world beyond.

The sun was going down in the distance, its last defiant rays glinting off of the Bellagio fountains down below. Across the street, the Paris Hotel’s Eiffel Tower turned blue beneath the fading light, and the darkening horizon brought the neon lights of the Strip to stark, gorgeous life. From up here, just now, it seemed that Vegas was the only city in the world.

“It’s rather lovely, isn’t it?”

Charlie turned at the sound of the British voice, deep and low and practically laced with sex. She tried to hide the shiver it sent through her spine, but she knew it was pointless. He was a werewolf, right? He could probably hear her heart hammering behind her rib cage.

Would it always do that when he was around?

He smiled at her, flashing perfect white teeth, and she hugged herself. She smiled back, a little nervously.

He was dressed in light beige linen pants and a long-sleeved white linen shirt, the sleeves rolled up to expose two leather bands around his wrists. When Charlie’s gaze fell on the bands, her smile wavered.

Lily had told her about those. Cole’s curse.

“I’ve always loved the twilight view from the Bellagio towers,” he said softly as he shoved his hands in his pockets and came forward. His green-eyed gaze skirted from her to the view beyond.

She watched him move through the room to stand beside her at the windows, a tall, powerful figure of grace.

“When you’re up here, at this time, it seems you’re looking down on the only city in the world.” He spoke so softly, it was nearly a whisper.

Charlie blinked. That was exactly what she had been thinking about Vegas.
Oh, no! Don’t tell me he can read my mind, on top of everything else!

He glanced down at her and frowned. “Charlie? Did I say something?” His beautiful features were suddenly etched with concern. His jade green eyes appeared so soulful that she knew at once he was being genuine. He hadn’t read her mind. They just had something else in common.

“No,” she told him, shaking her head and turning to look out at the lights below. “I was just thinking the same exact thing.” She glanced back up at him again, and managed another smile, this one not quite as nervous. “That’s all.”

He looked relieved and his own smile was back. It was killer. “Have you ever seen the fountains, luv?”
Charlie frowned. “I’m seeing them right now,” she said, not understanding.
His smile broadened. “Ah. Well, then. It’s settled. I’ll take you down myself.”

Charlie blinked. “What do you mean?” She could see the fountains very well from where she was standing. The room had the most incredible view.
It must cost a fortune
.

“I wouldn’t spoil the surprise,” he told her confidently. His voice continued to send shivers through Charlie’s body, and the mark on her arm was warming up, sending rivulets of pleasure up her arm and across her chest. It felt very good. “However first,” he continued, turning fully toward her and compelling her to look up at him once more, “there is someone in the next room who very much wishes to speak with you.”

Charlie’s heart sank. She didn’t want to speak with anyone else. Lily Kane had been very kind and it was clear to Charlie that the woman knew what she was doing when it came to people who had been through traumatic events. However, Charlie was all talked-out. She was sort of numb and more than a little tired. Could there really be anything else in the world that anyone could tell her right now that hadn’t already been bomb-shelled on her over the course of the last two days?

“Who?” she asked. It was all she could really muster. She kind of didn’t want to know.

As if sensing her hesitation and weariness, Cole’s smile became reassuring. He leaned toward her and offered her his hand. “Trust me.”

It was a strange request; a little disconcerting. And yet, Charlie found herself flushing beneath it. He wanted her trust. She’d never before given anyone but Jessie her complete trust. It was as if Cole knew that by asking this of her, he was asking for everything she could really give. He was asking for all of her. That was what he wanted.
All
of her.

It made Charlie feel very special. Coveted.

She couldn’t help the rush of heat that climbed her neck and painted her cheeks pink. Her nipples were hard against her lace bra and t-shirt when she hesitantly ducked her head and accepted the hand he offered.

His fingers were cool and strong and wrapped possessively around hers. The heat that had stolen across her chest suddenly raced up her arm and down her stomach to coil between her legs. Her breath caught in her throat, and she jerked her head up, her eyes searching for his.

Cole’s smile was gone. His eyes had darkened, the pupils at their centers expanding to encompass most of the green. It seemed that shadows had angled across his face, forcing his handsome features into stark lines. He looked hungry. He looked very much the wolf.

Charlie swallowed, audibly forcing the lump in her throat back down from where it had climbed. There was no hiding the tremor in her body now. There was no denying the moisture that was pooling between her legs. She could barely breathe.

Fortunately, Malcolm Cole seemed to possess faculties that Charlie had somehow lost when he touched her. He straightened and pulled his keen gaze from her own, though his grip on her hand did not ease. She knew instinctively that if she’d tried to pull away from him in that moment, he would not have let go.

He turned away from her and lead her across the room toward the door. She followed, if somewhat reluctantly, but a touch relieved to have an out from the situation. His heat was stifling.

Malcolm piloted her through the door and down the short hallway beyond, to the living and dining room area of the two bedroom, four bathroom suite. As they entered, Charlie’s gaze locked on the tall man who was standing at the windows.

She could sense Malcolm Cole’s power, like a massive mountain casting his shadow over the flat topography of the rest of the planet. She’d sensed the same kind of power in James Valentine. However,
this
man overshadowed both of them. Perhaps put together.

Charlie found her legs locking in place, refusing to allow her to go any further. As if sensing that she was there and that she had noticed him, the man at the windows turned to face her.

When his ice-blue eyes met hers, Charlie’s world fell out from under her. He was the spitting image of her father.

“Charlie, allow me to introduce Mr. Alexander Kavanagh,” Cole said. He gave her hand a gentle squeeze, drawing her gaze to his. “Your grandfather,” he finished, softly.

Charlie could feel her eyes grow wide and her jaw drop, but she was still frozen in place. Malcolm’s reassuring smile was back and he nodded toward Kavanagh, releasing Charlie’s hand.

It took her a moment to regain her ability to move. When she did, she turned to look at the man across the room. He offered her a smile of his own. It was also her father’s smile.

And then the world cracked open and the levies broke and, quite suddenly, Charlie’s eyes were filled with tears. She could feel Cole move away from her and out of the room, leaving her alone with the man that she had long thought was dead. It was what her parents had always told her.

“Hello, Charlie,” Kavanagh said. His voice rolled over her like a thousand hugs, soothing and warm and comforting. It felt the way hot chocolate tastes. The way Beethoven sounds. Like the New York skyline to world-weary eyes.

His smile was gentle, his light blue eyes filled with moisture of their own. “We have a lot to talk about.”

* * * *

Malcolm left the hotel room and strode down the hall toward the elevators. He needed some fresh air. Of course, in order to get to the fresh air downstairs, he would have to walk through the casino, which sported anything but fresh air. But it would have to do. The walk would do him some good as well. It was either that, or a cold shower.

He pushed the button for the elevator and ran a hand through his hair, forcing himself to breathe deeply. In. Out.

Christ.

All he’d done was hold her hand. One little touch and he was lit up like a firecracker. Every muscle in his body was tensed to the point of pain. His gums ached where his fangs threatened to lengthen, and it took nearly every ounce of self control he possessed to keep his dick from sucking up all of the blood in his body.

Need was riding him hard. No Dormant had ever,
ever
, smelled as good as Claire St.James did, and the woman bore his mark. There was absolutely no part of Cole that didn’t feel like claiming her now, here – in this hotel room, before the clock struck its next hour.

He had to calm down. He had to find a way to give Charlie the time she needed.

The elevator doors pinged open and Cole frowned. As he stepped into the lift, he thought of the way she’d reacted to his touch. She’d been just as turned on as he was. He’d been able to scent her arousal. He could hear her pulse quicken, her breath catch. He’d seen the desire in the fathomless blue of her eyes. She wanted him. He would bet every last dollar he possessed at any table downstairs on those stakes.

Other books

The Christmas Angel by Marcia Willett
No Way Out by Franklin W. Dixon
In the Heart of Forever by Jo-Anna Walker
The Bay at Midnight by Diane Chamberlain
Prospero's Daughter by Elizabeth Nunez
The Hanging Garden by Ian Rankin
The Unknown Shore by Patrick O'Brian
6 Beach Blanket Barbie by Kathi Daley