Shifters Forever Worlds Epic Collection
Page 88
Ana did not answer.
Isabel laughed. Looked him in the eye and laughed. “So, Signor Giovanni Tiero, our business is our own.”
He turned on his heel, quickly showing them his back, then said to his brothers, “Bring them to the house.”
Chapter Five
Gio and his brothers sat in the library. Their guests, the two female tigress shifters, were in spare quarters, dressing for dinner. Gio had the housekeeper provide them with an assortment of clothing, that for one reason or another, had been assembled at the villa.
The surplus of ladies’ attire came in handy at the most unexpected and opportune times. It had been a tradition that his mother had put in place, always providing extra clothing in case guests found themselves in need.
Each of the brothers had a scotch in front of him, though none of them were affected by alcohol, as alcohol had no effect on shifters, whatsoever. The Tiero men enjoyed the flavor and it had been one of their father’s traditions, a scotch before dinner while discussing business.
Traditions were big to the Tieros.
Gio heaved a sigh. Traditions were sometimes too important, and often very inhibiting. He pushed the thought away. He was firstborn. He had a responsibility to uphold these traditions. He had to fake it ‘til he felt it. And he’d do it to the best of his ability as he was raised to.
He was not accustomed to trespassers. No one dared to mess with him. No one dared to mess with the Tiero machine. “What do you think?” he asked his brothers.
“Two women,” Tito said. “That's it, just two women. Send them on their way. Let's give them a little bit of lip service. Maybe give them a little bit of a scare. That will keep them at bay.”
“I don't think they'll be that easy to scare. At least, not the feisty one.”
“Yeah, I think you took a liking to that one.” Tito snickered.
Gio gave him a look.
Federico cleared his throat, adjusted the collar on his shirt, pulling on it. “So what’s the plan regarding Esmerelda?” he asked.
Gio frowned at the subject change, then shrugged. “She has to face the Shifter Council. What choice do we have on that?” It was not like they had many choices, and he couldn’t be the one to buck convention.
Rumor had it Esmerelda had become involved with a shifter. She wouldn't tell the Tiero security team who it was. She wouldn't even admit to it. They’d tried to coerce her for the information. They’d threatened.
The redheaded witch had laughed at the idea of being threatened by a shifter. She didn’t take threats from shifters seriously.
Federico shook his head. “I know that's how it's supposed to be handled. I know it's the right thing to do, according to shifter customs, but she's never caused any trouble. We didn't even know she was here.”
Gio looked at his younger brother. Federico sported his hair longer than Gio, scruffy stubble marking his face. He was the rebel in the family, the black sheep. He had left the fold and traveled the world for years before finally returning home to join them in the family business. He narrowed his eyes. “Do you have any suggestions then, Rico?” Gio used his brother’s childhood nickname.
Federico delivered a slight shrug. “I’m not alpha. I don’t have to dictate policy.”
No, you just get to break policy while the rest of us clean up after you. You get to gallivant around the globe, traipsing into different adventures while someone else stays behind to make sure traditions are upheld and businesses are being run. While we battle others to keep our territory and protect our ways.
Bitter much? Gio’s subconscious recognized his resentment with Federico’s lack of adherence to rules.
Yes, I guess I am bitter. He twirled the glass, swirling the rich amber liquid inside, watching it refract the light and distort images on the other side of the tumbler.
Tito rose to his feet. “It's not our business what the council decides to do with her. All we need to do is our duty. And our duty is to take her to them, to turn her over.”
Hear, hear. Gio couldn’t argue with Tito’s logic.
A knock sounded on the door.
“Enter.” Gio sat up straight, wondering if they’d come to tell them the dinner was ready.
“Signor.” It was the nanny. “Vittorio is missing.”
Vittorio. His son. Gio rocketed to his feet.
“Where is Vax?” Tito asked the nanny.
“I don't care for that nickname.” Gio frowned at Tito.
“Vittorio was in the playroom while I was helping Veila in the bath.” She wrung her hands. “It's not like I could have left Veila.” Tears sprang to her eyes.
She was the third nanny in three months.
Could he not find a decent nanny to stay long enough to take care of the little ones?
Gio wasn't worried that his son would be lost, he was more worried that he would find some of their guests. The two tigress shifters.
Or worse—
The witch.
That caused him worry.
Little Vittorio, for all his bravery, would be used as a pawn to dictate Tiero policy if he was taken captive by the wrong person.
Chapter Six
Isabel paced the room. The shifters had put her and Ana in a guest room and told them to dress for dinner.
Dinner, my ass.
She was so tempted to break out. All she had to do was open the window, shift, and leap from the second floor to ground level and run into the night. She and her tigress both lost in the darkness, hidden by the shadows while they sought the witch.
Yes, she was tempted, but she wouldn’t indulge in that temptation. Isabel had quelled her rebellious stirrings. She suppressed them with the assurance that rebelling would create more hassles for her sister. That she shouldn’t leave the villa as it might thwart Ana’s efforts.
Lies.
Lies that Isabel told herself as to why she wasn’t leaving.
That was not why. Not the only reason anyway. Sure, she could tell herself that all day and night long, but she knew better.
It wasn’t that she wouldn’t leave.
She couldn’t.
Even if she wanted to, there was something unanswered here, something that drew her in, wrapping its clutches around her, growing like an ivy, persistent tendrils that sought to seize and keep her here.
No, she couldn’t go. Not yet.
She glanced at the bed. The housekeeper had brought an array of dresses, and Isabel had indicated she lay them on the bed.
She’d wanted to throw them at Giovanni Tiero personally for assuming they’d comply and stay for dinner.
Of course, we will. He held the key to Ana’s quest, access to searching for the witch.
The bed was littered with an assortment of colorful fabrics, sequins, bows, buttons, all designed to entice and seduce.
Too many of them were too small, most too tight. Isabel wore a sneer as she wondered who the hell the dresses belonged to.
And yet, she couldn’t get that hunk of a shifter out of her mind.
Beautiful did not even begin to describe him.
Could you call a man beautiful? There seemed something wrong with that. And yet, she couldn’t think of any other word.
Sure she could: Hot. Sexy. Delicious. Scary.
Scary? Where did that come from?
Yes, she did find something about him scary because the man’s piercing gaze ripped through her walls, and all her defenses were left crumbling as though the remnants of artillery. Scattered fragments of the barricades she’d always kept in place, barricades that kept men out. Something scary because there was a darkness she didn’t quite understand.
Until Giovanni—Gio—Tiero.
She heaved a deep breath of exasperation. What the hell was wrong with her?
She should run.
She knew she wouldn’t.
Scary. Definitely, because she was scared to death he could ram through all those defenses she’d spent many a year putting up.
Isabel
picked up one of the dozen dresses the housekeeper had brought in with the explanation: “Signor Tiero is inviting you to dinner.”
She crumpled one of the gowns’ silk fabric between her fingers, ignoring the quality, the craftsmanship in tailoring.
“Really?” She frowned. “He expects us to show up for dinner and behave casually. As if it’s a dinner party.”
She threw it at the wall. “How dare he!”
“Isabel. Please, calm down.” Ana, sitting on the window bench, looking out into the evening’s shadows turned Isabel’s way, worry clearly on her face, probably thinking about Cristiano. “Why does this bother you? Let’s have dinner with him, then let’s explain our cause. I’m sure he will work with us. He may even help us.”
Isabel’s nostrils flared in agitation. “Pffft. Did you see him? He’s a brute. He’s a—”
“You like him.” Ana turned back to gazing out the window, but Isabel could see her sister watching her in the window’s reflection.
Isabel stiffened, whirled. Cheeks heating with anger, she realized her mouth was open and snapped it shut. “I.” She delivered a foot stomp. “Do.” Another foot stomp. “Not.” Isabel kicked the footstool near the dresser Jesus, that hurt. “Ouch.”
She roared, a bellow that came from her tigress’s pain, then turned to Ana again. “Don’t say that,” she hissed, then flounced into the wingchair across from Ana. “I will make him pay for this. How dare he do this? Does he not know who we are?”
Ana wrung her hands. “For my sake. For Tino’s sake, please calm down. This is not the time to act hastily and Giovanni Tiero is not a man to antagonize.”
“Don’t tell me what to do! I’ll—”
The door opened, interrupting Isabel’s tirade.
She stared at the slit, wondering who would be there as it opened further and further until it was fully open.
At the threshold stood a boy with intense eyes. A boy who was easily a miniature replica of the Tieros.
“Who are you?” the boy asked.
Isabel huffed and crossed her arms over her chest. “Who are you, little man?”
“I’m Vittorio. My friends call me Vax.”
Ana rose to her feet, seeming eager to intercept Isabel’s fury. “I’m Capriana Valenti. My friends call me Ana.”
“Can I call you Ana?” The mini Tiero stepped closer.
“Of course.” Ana held out her hand.
The boy shook it solemnly. “Don’t tell my father I was here. I was curious about our new guests. It’s not often we get guests. You’re the second ones this week. I haven’t been able to see the witch. She’s confined in a different wing.”
Icy fingertips glossed across Isabel’s spine. She felt she knew the answer to this before she asked. “Who is your father?” She studied the little boy with the serious expression.
He glanced at her, head cocked, eyes that reminded her too much of eyes she’d stared at earlier today. “Giovanni. Shhh. Someone’s coming. I have to go.”
And like that, the boy was gone.
The icy fingertips grew into a vice that clamped down on her heart and seared it with a burning cold.
I should have known.
“He’s mated.” Isabel whispered the words, not aware she’d said them out loud until Ana responded.
Ana turned her way. “What?”
Isabel’s mouth opened. She spoke, but she didn’t feel as if she was really there. No, she wasn’t there. She was in a dungeon where she was preparing to castigate herself for allowing that damned dark-haired gorgeous being called Gio to break through her walls.
And yet, Isabel did speak the words. “Giovanni Tiero. That was his son.”
“Yes. I gathered.” Ana said as if it was no big deal. She added, “Let’s go to dinner.”
“Harrumph.” Isabel exhaled.
No big deal, at all.
Her tigress released a roar.
You. You should have warned me. Isabel tuned the betraying feline out. Until today, her tigress had always been great at protecting Isabel’s heart.
Until today.
Chapter Seven
And so the hunt began, the search for Vittorio Tiero, the little boy who liked to be called Vax, though his father disapproved.
Gio had ascertained that his son was not with the witch. He breathed a sigh of relief. And now he had to make sure that he was not in the wing that held the two shifters. He was traveling down the hallway taking long strides when he saw his son’s shadow as it turned the corner walking away from the room he’d given to the two tigress shifters.
He followed his son with stealth, making sure the little one didn't see him while he made his way back to his room, where the nanny wrapped her arms around him and gently scolded him for running away. Telling him that she had been worried about him. He had no idea what he’d do if anything were to happen to his children.
He cast a glance down the hallway that led to Isabel’s room with a forlorn look on his face. He couldn’t help himself. He wanted to see more of her.
All of her.
All the time.
He glanced at his watch. Dinnertime.
He made his way to the dining room, joined by his brother as his long strides took him across empty hallways that should be filled with joyful sounds.
This was the house of grief and mourning. There’d be no joy found here.
Gio rose to his feet as the two tigress shifters entered the dining room. His brothers followed suit. They would be dining alone. A security crew, his henchmen, the rest would be dining later, separately. Gio wanted this time alone with the two tigress shifters.
He barely noticed Ana come in, for he could not pull his gaze away from Isabel. Stunning in a black dress that hugged her curves, wonderfully ample curves, her muscular calves on display, a feast for his eyes, a promise of satin skin that rose above.
No woman had a right to look so delicious. No woman had a right to drag his tiger into a state of thrall like this.
After the two ladies sat, he took his seat, tigress shifter on each side of him, a tornado raging within his tiger.
Chapter Eight
They were into the meal, and Gio’s stomach was in a battle with demons. Or so it felt. A battle. Giving his heart to another. Betrayal. Loss. Too much to deal with.
Isabel's intense gaze was getting to him. He couldn't lie to himself about that. He tried to put on a front, eating with as much gusto as he could manufacture, but there was something about her, something about her inquisitive gaze, her engaging eyes, and those succulent lips. There was something about her tigress, a fierce creature that wasn’t willing to yield to Isabel, as far as his tiger could tell.
Why did her tigress have a divide with Isabel? He surveyed Isabel’s expression, trying to determine what it was that created the divide he sensed with her tigress.
“Where's your crew?” Isabel wore a smirk. “Surely, you don't feel safe with only the three of you here.” She baited him, wearing an innocent expression that he knew was a farce.
Gio didn't look at her. He was making a point not to. Instead, he turned to Ana. “What was your purpose?”
She took a deep breath. “First, I apologize for interloping on your territory without your permission.”
Across from her sister, Isabel let out a grunt and a laugh.
Gio frowned. “Apology accepted.” He reached for the quail.
“I need your help.” And then Ana added, “Please.”
Gio nodded. “What would you need help with?”
“I have a friend—”
Isabel's giggle interrupted her.
“Stop,” Ana snapped.
“Sorry,” Isabel mumbled.
Isabel didn’t look sorry. Was she being contrary on his account?
Ana continued to speak. “My friend is in… I have a friend in trouble… And he can't be freed without the help of a witch that I've heard is in this area.”
“Esmerelda?” Tito asked.
Ana glanced
at Tito. “How did you know?”
Gio gave Tito a look. They were here to get information not give it. He kept his voice level. “She's the only witch in this area, and she's unavailable.”
“What? What do you mean? What does that mean?” Ana chewed on her bottom lip.
“She's being held.” Gio gave Tito and Federico a guarded expression of warning.
“Where?” Isabel asked.
“Here.” Federico supplied the answer.
Well, I’ll be damn. Both my brothers are giving these two all the information they want.
“We need her,” Ana said.
“I can't let her go.” Gio wasn't in the mood to debate this. Not with these two. Actually, not with anyone.
“Can't we discuss it?” Ana's tone was pleading.
“Discuss?” He made a point to look at Isabel. “If your sister can contain herself. You know…” He paused for emphasis. “If she can behave. Civilly. Be a lady.”
In reward to his baiting statements, Isabel rose to her feet. “Contain myself? You—you—”
“Sit,” Gio demanded.
She glared at him. “You can't make me.”
He clenched his jaw. “You need a spanking. Such a petulant child.” Why did his pants suddenly get tighter at the thought of spanking that curvy ass.
“Oh.” She raised a brow. “Is that how you treat your wife? The mother of your child?”
Next to him, Ana gasped.
Gio fought to gain his composure, to fight the image of Vanessa from returning to the forefront of his mind. He kept his eyes glued to his plate, though he felt his brothers’ gazes on him. Could they tell he was affected? Could these two new strangers tell how much that bothered him?
The rustling of clothing alerted him that someone had risen from their seat. Out of the corner of his eye, he could see it was Tito.
“Please, sit. My brother has lost his mate. Sit.” Tito's voice was firm.
“I'm—God. I'm so sorry.” Isabel's voice was small.
“We apologize,” Ana said. “Please—”
Gio held up a hand. “I'd rather discuss the business at hand.”