Simply Irresistible

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Simply Irresistible Page 6

by Grayson, Kristine


  He put the kitten back in the basket and was helping it toward its mother’s stomach just as the bell jingled above his door.

  He sighed. It was his own fault. Even though it wasn’t much past 8 a.m, a customer had found him. Probably some cranky customer with a stray Doberman she wanted him to buy.

  “Excuse me?” a woman spoke from the door. She had a husky voice, warm and attractive. It sent a thrill down his spine.

  He sat up slowly and peered over the counter. The woman was small and bookish. She had curly brown hair that tumbled around her face, obscuring her features. Her oversized glasses magnified her brown eyes. And she had her arms wrapped around her waist like the teenage girls in his one-room school used to do ninety years ago, when they were asking the boys to the Sadie Hawkins Day dance.

  “What can I do for you?” Dex made the question friendlier than he normally would have because she looked so uncomfortable.

  She came deeper into the store, and the light from the aquariums caught her face. Her skin was the color of the perfect tan, even though he had a hunch this woman never went outdoors. And she had bow-shaped lips, a pert nose, and cheekbones that were so high that they gave definition to her entire face.

  In fact, if she brushed the hair away from her forehead, got glasses that suited her, and stood up straight, she would be a beautiful woman.

  Or, more accurately, it would be apparent to the entire world that she was a beautiful woman. But somehow he was glad that the entire world had to work to see her that way. That way, he wouldn’t have to share her.

  And then he flushed. He never had thoughts like that. Never.

  One of the kittens mewled. The woman came closer. She smelled of rosewater, a scent he hadn’t smelled in fifty years. A scent he loved.

  “Kittens?” she asked, peering over the counter.

  Dex looked down. The black-and-white had escaped again. Apparently the little brat hadn’t been hungry and had decided to continue on his search of the great tiled frontier.

  “Some lady left them yesterday,” Dex said. “I usually don’t handle cats.”

  “I thought you were a pet store,” the woman said.

  He shook his head, wishing she hadn’t said that. He found her so attractive, and she had uttered the most irritating phrase in his life. He wasn’t the pet store. He was the pet store—

  “I’m sorry,” she said. “I meant, I thought this was a pet store. Jeez, I’m not at my best today.”

  Dex looked up at her, feeling stunned. It was almost as if she heard what he was thinking. But she couldn’t, could she? She would be a mage someday—the power fairly sparked off her—but she was too young to have come into it already.

  “It’s all right,” he said. “I sell pet supplies. And fish. Lots of fish.”

  She nodded. “I would think getting rid of kittens would be hard, anyway. I mean, you never know who’s buying them.”

  “Exactly,” he said. “Why don’t more people understand that?”

  She gave a one-shoulder shrug. “I have trouble parting with collectibles. I can’t imagine what it would be like dealing with living creatures.”

  Someone who understood. No one had ever given him perfect understanding before. They always thought of their own pets but never of all the others. Obviously this woman did.

  Dex smiled at her and extended his hand. “I’m Dexter Grant.”

  She bit her lower lip. He got the sense, fleeting but powerful, that she had been looking for someone else.

  Then she smiled. It lit up her entire face and brought out that hidden beauty. He felt slightly dizzy. Then he realized he had forgotten to breathe.

  She took his hand, and her fingers were soft and dry. “Vivian Kinneally.”

  Dex resisted the urge to take that slight hand and bring it to his lips.

  Vivian Kinneally stared at him as if she were daring him to do so. Then she slipped her hand from his and pressed her fingers against her right temple. “Things are never easy when you want them to be.”

  “Easy? So I take it you didn’t come to adopt a kitten.”

  Her smile faded. Her fingers continued rubbing, as if she were trying to massage away a headache. “I wish. Actually, I came looking for someone.”

  “Oh?” He tensed in spite of himself. His sense had been right. She had been looking for someone else and she was disappointed to find him.

  She nodded. “I’m not even sure this is the right place. I mean, it meets the description my friends—well, they’re not really my friends, they’re more like…intruders, but they’re the ones who sent me, and—”

  “Who’re you looking for?”

  “Jeez,” she said again, and he found that he liked the old-fashioned slang term when he heard it from her. “I’m even talking like them.”

  “Who?”

  She waved her left hand dismissively. “It’s a long story.”

  Her skin had paled noticeably. She seemed to be going gray, as if the pain she felt were getting worse. He wanted to touch her temples and magic the pain away, but he didn’t. He knew better. Sudden magic startled people.

  “You can tell me,” he said.

  She shook her head, then put her left hand on the counter, as if catching her balance. “No. I’d like to appear at least slightly sane.”

  The kitten mewled again, and then Dex felt needle-sharp claws digging into his calf. The damn thing had jumped onto his leg.

  “One second,” he said, and reached down. He scooped up the kitten, holding it gently, and raised it to his face. “I’m going to start calling you Marco Polo if you’re not careful, little one.”

  The kitten mewled again, and his mother looked up from her basket. Dex put the kitten back into it, but Marco Polo marched toward the edge before Dex had a chance to sit up.

  “Cute,” Vivian said.

  “They all are at that age. But I have a hunch that little guy is going to be a handful.”

  She had both hands on the counter now. He was wondering if she was dizzy.

  “Do you need to sit down?” he asked.

  “No,” she said. “I just need to find someone. Do you know an Henri Barou?”

  He felt as if he had been punched in the stomach. His real name was Henri Barou, but no one knew that. He’d left that name behind eighty years ago because he’d hated it so much. Since then, he’d stolen his names from movie characters he admired. This one came from C.K. Dexter-Haven, Cary Grant’s character in The Philadelphia Story, a man who was decidedly wittier and smarter than Dex could ever hope to be.

  “No,” he said, but the answer was a beat too late.

  Despite her obvious pain, she gave him a penetrating look. “Why are you lying to me?”

  He wasn’t sure how to answer. He hadn’t covered well. Should he tell her that Henri Barou sold the store to him or that—

  “You’re Henri Barou,” she said. “Why did you tell me you’re Dexter Grant?”

  “I am Dexter Grant,” he snapped.

  “And Henri Barou.” She rubbed the bridge of her nose. “They mentioned you might use a different name.”

  Dex frowned. Who knew his real name? Not many people. No one alive, at least no one he could think of. If people knew a mage’s real name, they could have power over him.

  He needed to know who gave this woman his name, and who pointed her in the right direction. Apparently he had enemies out there he wasn’t even aware of.

  “Who mentioned that my name might be different?”

  She blinked, and he got the sense of real pain wafting off her. Normally he would have insisted that she sit down, but he was unnerved by the changes.

  “Well, this is where it gets strange,” she said. “This morning, three women appeared at my apartment, claiming they were in trouble. They say their names are Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, and they call themselves the Fates. It gets weirder than that. Are you sure you want to hear about it?”

  He wasn’t sure. But he remembered that dream, and the feeling
of foreboding it had given him. Were the Fates warning him? That would make more sense than anything this Vivian was telling him.

  He couldn’t believe the Fates had come to her place. They never left their judicial court and quarters. Often they changed the look of the quarters. In fact, whenever he’d been there, it had never looked the same.

  “What’s really going on?” Dex asked.

  Vivian shrugged. “I don’t entirely understand it. They say they’re in trouble and they need your help.”

  A surge of anger ran through him. They did this to test him. If they pleaded trouble, then they could see if he would rush to their rescue. Of course, they were involving a mortal. Well, technically, she wasn’t a mortal, but she hadn’t come into her magic yet. Which make it all the more likely that this was a Fate trick. They didn’t like people who interfered with mortal lives.

  “I’m sorry,” he said. “I’ve never heard of these women and I don’t know why they think I can help them.”

  “Why do you lie?” Vivian asked.

  His gaze met hers. The pain in her eyes seemed unbearable. Before he even thought it through, he hurried around the counter and put his arms around her. She was soft, and tinier than he had expected. He helped her to his chair, which was the only one in the front of the store.

  “Should I call a doctor?” he asked.

  She was vibrating with pain. The muscles in her shoulders were taut.

  “No,” she said. “No, really. I’m all right. This’ll pass.”

  Then he realized what was going on. He should have realized it when he saw all that power sparking off her. “You’re psychic.”

  She closed her eyes. “I’m sorry.”

  He hadn’t expected that response. “Sorry? Why?”

  “I didn’t mean to cause trouble or to call you a liar. It’s just that these women seem so desperate, and they told me to come here. You know who they are, right?”

  No sense lying any longer. She would see through it all. “Yes.”

  “So they are magical?”

  “Yes.”

  “And so are you.” It wasn’t a question. She was getting a sense of him. “You also believe that they’re lying so that they can hurt you.”

  “Yes,” he said, feeling inadequate.

  “Why would they want to hurt you?”

  He shrugged.

  “Because they’re bored?” She opened her eyes. “Are people in your world that cruel? No. They’re crueler.”

  He was answering her questions without even speaking. He hadn’t ever been around anyone with this much psychic ability. Or perhaps he was broadcasting his thoughts. He was upset, and that could cause broadcasting. And he found her so incredibly attractive that he could be forcing a connection where there wasn’t one.

  He hoped she hadn’t caught that last thought.

  “Can I get you something for your headache?”

  “No,” she said. “I already took something. It’ll get better. They always do. Why would they hurt you?”

  It took him a moment to deal with the transition. They no longer meant headache. They meant the Fates.

  “I’ll deal with them,” he said. “I’ll be right back.”

  He went to the front door of the shop and locked it, turning the OPEN sign to CLOSED. Then he scooped up Marco Polo, who had followed him, placed the kitten on Vivian’s lap, and walked to the back room.

  He needed a little privacy for this spell, and he didn’t want to think about what he was going to do until he got back there, since he seemed to be shouting every thought.

  The back room was crowded with unloaded boxes of Science Diet and Iams cat food, books on all the various fish, and some aquariums ordered by a new restaurant but not yet picked up. He hadn’t put an office back here, preferring to work out front, but there was an area for animals that he didn’t want to sell, an area that dated from the time when he really took pets.

  Directly in front of him was the outside door. He double-checked the deadbolt and pushed on the steel just to make certain it was closed tightly. Then he closed the door to the tiny bathroom as well.

  Precautions, precautions. He hadn’t used magic this powerful in the store in years.

  Then he clenched his fists, trying to hold in all the anger he was feeling. He would save that until he saw those harpies face-to-face.

  “To the Fates,” he said, and disappeared in a puff of smoke.

  SIX

  THE HEADACHE was getting worse. It felt like someone was pounding on the inside of Vivian’s mind. Or maybe on the outside of her mind, and it was echoing inside. Or maybe the entire percussion staff of every marching band in the country had decided to rehearse in her head.

  Vivian plucked little Marco Polo off her lap and set him on the floor. The movement made her dizzy. She put a hand to her head and waited for the room to stop spinning.

  Just her luck to meet the handsomest man she had ever seen when she had the worst headache of her life. She wasn’t even certain she had been speaking English—and then, when he seemed not to know about the Fates, she was afraid he was going to consider her crazy.

  He just sat behind the counter, watching her with those amazing blue eyes. He had rich black hair and a square jaw. He even had a dimple in his chin. When she had seen that, she wished Kyle were with her so that she could point out how charming a dimple was.

  But of course Kyle, being eleven years old and male, probably wouldn’t have thought the dimple as charming as Vivian did.

  The headache seemed to grow, as if it were alive. She had to do something about it—find out what had happened to Henri, or Dexter, which he seemed to prefer—and see if he had some aspirin or something, anything to make this pounding go away.

  Vivian stood, careful not to step on the adventuresome kitten. She was glad that Henri—or Dexter, which he seemed to prefer—had locked the front door. The little one, Marco Polo, seemed to have inspired all the others into exploring. Mom didn’t care; she slept after a particularly draining feeding session.

  The store had strange lighting. The fish tanks provided most of it. Somewhere nearby, a man with a Southern accent talked about bluesman Robert Johnson.

  The radio. It was only the radio.

  The scratchy sound of an old recording filled the store, clashing with the hum of the cash register. One of the kittens meowed, and it sounded like someone screamed—at least to Vivian’s sensitive ears.

  She needed to lie down. She’d got a sense that there was someplace for her to do it in the back. She’d had migraines before, often after a lot of concentration, particularly psychic concentration. The migraines usually passed after a short nap.

  She used the counter, and then some displays, to help herself toward the back. The fish, moving in their tanks, seemed to follow her, as if they were concerned. She was imagining everything.

  A short nap, and she could drive out of here, out of poor Henri/Dexter’s life. The man had just been trying to live like a normal person, even though he clearly was not. Just the mention of those women had put him into a panic.

  They had some kind of history—the women had even referred to it—and it wasn’t something he wanted to revisit.

  Vivian would return to them and make them go to that restaurant, Quixotic, instead. Or she’d go there herself, bring someone up to her apartment and get help.

  After her nap.

  She made it to the door leading into the back. The pounding on her skull grew harder, almost as if someone were trying to get into her mind. She pulled the door open and found herself faced with boxes, empty aquariums, and a lot of pet food.

  In fact, the entire back had the meaty odor of dry dog food, and it made her instantly queasy.

  She didn’t see Henri/Dexter anywhere. The back door was locked, and the bathroom door was closed.

  She called his name, but he didn’t answer. Which was odd, because she hadn’t seen him leave.

  There was no place to lie down back here. She put a hand on the
pile of boxes and leaned on them, feeling like an old woman.

  Then she used the last of her strength to cast about with her mind for him. But she couldn’t sense Henri/Dexter. She was alone here except for the kittens and the mother cat.

  A shiver ran up her back. Alone, and the headache was growing worse, worse than it had ever been in her life.

  She wasn’t going to be able to drive. She wasn’t even sure she could walk any farther.

  She was going to need some help, and she was going to need it fast.

  ***

  Dexter appeared in a giant library. It smelled musty and the lights were dim. The floor was made of marble and there were long tables between the stacks. Ladders on wheels ran up the walls as far as the eye could see.

  He looked up. The books seemed to run forever. He wondered if every book ever written was in here, and then supposed it was.

  Behind him, gum snapped.

  “Ew, gross,” a young girl said.

  “Don’t do that. You almost got it in my hair,” said another.

  “Did not.” The last voice was petulant.

  He turned around. Three teenage girls sat on top of one of the tables, legs crossed. Stacks of books surrounded them, and they all had books open on their laps.

  The girls wore crop tops, low-slung jeans, and too much makeup. Their feet were bare, but their toes were painted with glitter polish and decorated with fake tattooed butterflies.

  “Excuse me,” Dex said, keeping his voice down even though they hadn’t. “I’m looking for the Fates.”

  The girl closest to him—a long-haired blonde with sky blue eyes—smiled at him. “That’s us!”

  “No,” he said. “The real Fates.”

  The girl in the middle flipped her beaded cornrows out of her face with one beringed hand. “We are the real Fates,” she said with a trace of annoyance.

  He was the one who was getting annoyed. All he had wanted to do today was find a home for five kittens. He hadn’t planned on spending his morning searching for three women he didn’t even like.

 

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