Read Unforgiven (A Cyn and Raphael Novella Book 3) Online
Authors: D. B. Reynolds
Cyn nodded. She believed him, because no matter what problems had come between them, she had never doubted the strength of his love. And she knew he wouldn’t risk losing her. Not again.
“You’ll keep your cell phone on?” she verified.
“I will, though Juro won’t need it.”
“If Juro’s with me, who’ll protect you? Maybe that’s what they want.”
“Juro’s brother will be with me, as will Jared,” he reminded her. As if conjured by the sound of his name, Raphael’s lieutenant, Jared, pulled open the doors and joined them on the wide porch.
“A problem, my lord?”
“A probe, I believe. Coming in through the program for homeless teens run by Cyn’s friend Lucia.”
Jared glanced at Cyn. The two of them didn’t get along well, but played nice for Raphael’s sake. “Shall I check it out?” he asked Raphael.
“No, you’ll stay with me. Juro will accompany Cyn and Elke. Before the night is over, we’ll know if this is a threat or not. It may be a simple misunderstanding.”
“But you don’t think so,” Cyn commented, stepping closer and resting her hand on his chest.
“No.”
Cyn nodded again. “Okay. Then we’ll handle it.”
“Follow Juro’s lead in this, my Cyn.”
“Of course,” she assured him, but he knew her too well for her breezy words to be reassuring.
“You will humor me in this,” he said darkly.
Cyn rolled her eyes. “Yeah, yeah. I’ll let the big guy call the shots. If he’s not too busy flirting with Luci,” she couldn’t help adding with a wicked grin.
Raphael’s eyes closed briefly. “Perhaps I should cancel my meeting and go with you myself.”
Cyn blew out an exasperated breath. “Relax, fang boy. I promise to behave, okay? Besides, I’m not exactly helpless, you know.”
“All too well, my Cyn. Juro?” he said, turning to face the huge Japanese vampire. “You know what to do.”
Juro nodded silently, which had Cyn giving him a narrow look. How come he knew what to do and she didn’t?
“Juro will brief you on the way over,
lubimaya
,” Raphael murmured, correctly interpreting her look. “Now kiss me good-bye. The sooner we leave, the sooner we’ll return from our separate ventures.”
Cyn rose up on her toes to give him a lingering kiss, not caring that half of his security team was watching, and knowing that he wouldn’t care either. One of the many things she loved about Raphael was how open and obvious he was in his love for her, as if sensing she needed that kind of reassurance. And it worked.
“Come home soon, babe,” she whispered against his mouth.
He cupped her jaw in his big hand and touched his lips to hers in a sensuous caress. “Stay safe,
lubimaya.”
And then he was gone, sliding into the dark interior of the waiting limousine.
Cyn waited until the limo was out of sight then rattled her keys in Juro’s direction. “Are we taking mine, or do you want something bigger?” she asked him. Her regular ride was a good-sized Range Rover, but she knew Juro preferred the bigger SUVs that Raphael sometimes traveled in. They had been modified with security in mind, their black-tinted windows bullet-proofed and every inch of the exterior armored, including the undercarriage.
Juro flashed his own set of keys with a droll look on his face that passed for amusement. “We’ll take mine,” he told her predictably.
“Are we going somewhere?” Elke asked, joining them on the steps. She was dressed in her usual workout gear and looked distinctly unhappy at the apparent change of plans.
“Luci’s,” Cyn provided. “She may have a vamp spy on her hands.”
Elke gave her a narrow look. “Is this just your way of getting out of a workout?”
“Not this time,” Cyn said somberly. “The threat is real enough that Raphael’s sending Juro along with us.”
Elke’s pale eyes widened in surprise as she stared at Juro, a questioning look on her face. After all, as Raphael’s security chief, Juro was her direct superior in the pecking order.
“What happened?” she asked.
“We can discuss it in the car,” Juro rumbled. “Lucia is alone with a strange vampire.”
A warm glow sparked in Cyn’s heart at this evidence of Juro’s feelings for Luci. She loved them both and especially loved the idea of her two friends finding happiness with each other.
“We’re taking the Expedition,” Juro said, as if there’d ever been any doubt. Not that Cyn cared. In fact, if there really was an enemy vamp waiting for them at Luci’s, she’d rather have the more secure vehicle at hand. Not to mention the giant vampire.
“Let’s go then, big guy. Luci’s waiting,” she added, giving him a wink. He didn’t react to her teasing. Not a blush, not a twitch.
“You’re no fun,” Cyn growled. He gave her a Mona Lisa smile then turned to walk toward the SUV with an athletic grace that belied the sheer size of him. Cyn and Elke followed, the latter, grumbling about going off to confront an enemy vamp while wearing workout clothes.
Cyn tuned her out. Elke was just pissed because she thought her uniform suit made her look more intimidating. With her short, white blond hair and relatively small stature, Elke was too often dismissed as a threat. But that could be handy sometimes. Still, Elke felt it interfered with her ability to do her job as Cyn’s bodyguard effectively. Cyn could have told her that wasn’t true. Elke gave off such a strong don’t-fuck-with-me vibe that she didn’t need a mannish charcoal suit to make her point.
Juro was in a less charitable mood than Cyn, however. He gave Elke a single quelling glance and she shut up. Because that same don’t-fuck-with-me vibe of Elke’s was amped up about a thousand times coming from Juro. Cyn bit back a smile as she settled in for the trip to Luci’s.
The drive from Raphael’s Malibu estate to Luci’s place in West L.A. took longer than it should have. But then, any time you climbed into a car in L.A., you entered the great lottery of traffic jams. One day a ten mile trip could take ten minutes. The next, the same journey could take an hour. Today was in between, but by the time they finally arrived at Jessica’s House, the shelter for runaway teens that Luci and Cyn had founded several years ago, Cyn’s anxiety had skyrocketed. Luci was a very competent woman. She dealt every day and night with a bunch of rowdy, unhappy and maladjusted teenagers, and she did it without blinking. If this new guy was worrying her, then there was a reason to worry.
Juro pulled up in front of the house, his eyes on the entrance as he drew to a stop. Cyn followed his gaze but saw nothing other than a few teens slipping out the front door with wary glances in the direction of the big, black vehicle at the curb. There didn’t seem to be anything about the house that warranted the kind of intense scrutiny Juro was giving it, but then he was a difficult guy to read. His default facial expression was a carefully cultivated blank. He and Cyn got along fairly well, and she’d known him to crack a tiny smile on occasion, but that wasn’t what she was seeing there now.
“Juro?” she asked.
“Lucia is right,” he murmured, his voice so deep that it was little more than a rumble of sound.
Cyn opened her mouth to ask what he meant, but he was already out of the vehicle and striding up the walkway, taking the four steps to the front porch in a single, graceful bound and pulling the screen door open.
“Who the fuck put a burr up his ass?” Elke muttered as she slid out of the truck, but her feet no sooner hit the grass than she was snapping out an arm to stop Cyn from following Juro into the house. Or at least she tried to.
“Fuck that, Elke,” Cyn said, slipping around her bodyguard. “I’m going in there.”
“Of course you are,” Elke agreed, rolling her eyes. “Why do I even bother?”
“Enough with the long-suffering bullshit,” Cyn said as she climbed to the porch and yanked the door open. “You live for this stuff. Before I showed up, you were bored to tears guarding Raphael’s front door from all those threatening bimbos.”
“Yeah—” Elke snorted, “—now I only need to worry about the one.”
Cyn gasped in feigned outrage. “Are you calling me a bimbo?”
“If the shoe fits, sugar. Everything here looks—” Elke’s words cut off as she put on a burst of vampire speed to get ahead of Cyn, then stopped so suddenly that Cyn nearly ran into her. Any shred of playfulness disappeared as Elke blocked Cyn from moving any farther into the house, her entire body stiffening into readiness like an immoveable stone statue, her fangs emerging from her gums in an unmistakable display of aggression.
Cyn didn’t try to get past her, but she did take a step to one side so that the weapon she drew would hit the bad guy and not Elke. Her eyes were on Juro as he moved purposefully down the short hallway to the back of the house where Luci was engaged in earnest conversation with a teenaged boy. He was taller than she was, slender, with dark scruffy hair, and wore battered jeans and a T-shirt, along with a pair of athletic shoes that stood out not only because they looked too new, but because they were a recent and highly coveted design. On runaway kids, it was a red flag that the shoes had probably been stolen. He was also standing too close to Luci, looming over her and invading her space with clear intent, if not to intimidate, then at least to establish dominance in the conversation. But Luci dealt with young men like him all the time, treating them with compassion and a real affection that the teens inevitably warmed to. For all this kid’s aggressive posturing, he was just another unhappy teenager, and Cyn didn’t understand Elke’s extreme reaction.
At least not until she saw Juro insert himself between Luci and the boy. Without a word, Juro reached one huge arm behind him and tucked Luci into a protective curl against his back. Normally, that proof of the big guy’s affection would have been enough to catch Cyn’s attention, but not today. She was too focused on the threatening glare that Juro was directing at the teenager, who Cyn abruptly realized wasn’t a teenager at all. He was a vampire, and he was the reason they were all here.
“Elke?” Cyn whispered. “Do you know him?”
Elke shook her head sharply. “But Juro doesn’t like him, and that’s good enough for me.”
“Who are you?” Juro’s deep voice rumbled. “And why are you here?”
“My lord,” the newcomer said smoothly, “forgive me. It was not my intention to disturb anyone as exalted as yourself.”
When Juro didn’t react to the blatant flattery, the strange vamp gave a longsuffering sigh. “My name is Pascal, and I’ve come from Chicago,” he offered grudgingly. “Nothing against Aden, but he does carry a grudge, and he’s none too welcoming for those of us who worked for Klemens. I thought I’d try my luck out here. I’ve nothing but respect for Raphael.”
Cyn frowned. Aden was the new Lord of the Midwest. He’d defeated, aka
killed
, all other challengers after the former lord Klemens’s unlamented death. Klemens had been an asshole of the worst sort, so she could understand why Aden wouldn’t want any of Klemens’s old henchmen working for him.
“You’ve a strange way of showing your respect—lurking among teenagers, threatening friends,” Juro said, not making any attempt to conceal his distrust. The intruder shrugged, the simple gesture demonstrating an otherworldly grace that Cyn had only seen with vampires. She chastised herself for missing the obvious. She shouldn’t need Juro or anyone else to identify a vampire for her. Cyn lived with vampires. She knew the little things to look for, the unmistakable signs. That she’d missed this guy told her she was getting too complacent, too reliant on her vampire bodyguards. And that was never a good thing.
“I meant no harm to anyone,” the vamp was saying. “But I wasn’t certain of my welcome. I’d heard on the street that vampires hung around this house, so I did what we’ve always done to survive. I blended, hiding in plain sight until I could figure out a way to contact Raphael without getting summarily executed.”
His words practically reeked of sincerity, but there was something not quite right about it, about
him
. He was a little
too
sincere, a little too intense, as if he was trying a little too hard.
“If you want to live beyond the next two minutes, you’ll stop that,” Juro growled.
The other vampire laughed skittishly. “Can’t blame a vamp for trying.”
Juro didn’t respond, but the exchange caught Cyn’s attention. Had this guy tried to use his vampire-given abilities to manipulate
Juro
? What an idiot.
“I’m a little thrown by the four-alarm response is all,” the vamp continued, twitching nervously and
unwisely
in Cyn’s opinion. “Rumor has it that Miss Luci there is a friend of Raphael’s mate.” He gave Cyn a sly glance that told her he knew who she was, even though no one seemed to know
him
. “But all of this fuss over … Oh,” he said, his eyes widening in exaggerated surprise as he took in Juro’s protective posture. “It’s the lovely Luci herself, isn’t it? Is she yours?”
Juro regarded the smaller vampire through half-lidded eyes that had taken on the golden glow of his power, even as he tightened his arm around Luci. Cyn couldn’t help noticing that her friend appeared quite comfortable cuddled up against the Japanese vampire’s broad back, and she decided that she and Luci were definitely going have a talk later . . . after they swept up the dust of this interloper who was clearly too stupid to live.
“Don’t worry about Lucia,” Juro rumbled, his voice filled with more menace that Cyn could remember ever having heard from him before.
“No offense intended,” the vampire muttered, his gaze shifting to take in Cyn and Elke. “Ms. Leighton?” he asked, staring at Cyn.
Elke immediately shifted to place herself more directly in front of Cyn.
Cyn studied the new guy briefly then deliberately slid her weapon back into its shoulder holster. “I’m Cynthia Leighton,” she confirmed. “Who’re you?” She permitted nothing but polite curiosity to shade her words. The first rule of dealing with vamps was never to let them know, or even think, that you were intimidated by them.
“Raphael’s mate,” the vampire whispered. “I’m honored, my lady.”
“Don’t be,” Cyn cautioned him dryly. “I’m here for Luci, not you.”
He gave a delighted laugh and started toward her, only to be thwarted by both Juro and Elke.