Good, the Bad, and the Vampire

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Good, the Bad, and the Vampire Page 4

by Sara Humphreys


  “Alright, then. Let me guess.” Dakota tilted his face toward the sky and pursed his lips together. “Give me a minute.”

  “Careful, you might hurt yourself with all that thinking.”

  “I got it,” he said abruptly. He tilted his smiling face to her and looked totally satisfied with himself. “Definitely.”

  “What?” Panic shimmied up her back. “My secrets?”

  “No. Your favorite band.”

  Trixie gaped at him but he didn’t seem to notice.

  “Now, based on that colorful hair of yours, I’m thinkin’ you’re a fan of that Sid Vicious fella, or maybe the Clash.” His hold on her loosened and his thumb made another lazy pass along hers, sending whispers of gooseflesh up her bare arms. “Now, me? I think Johnny Cash is about the best there ever is, was, or will be. Somethin’ about the way he tells a story, you know? Like he can see right inside my soul. Too bad he never got turned vamp. We’d be gettin’ new songs from him forever.”

  Trixie was speechless. Absolutely without words.

  Here they were in the middle of the woods. She had just threatened to kick his ass. And the guy was talking about Johnny Cash. Not only that, but he was right. She did love Sid Vicious and the Clash.

  Damn it. How annoying. And charming. Crap.

  “Am I right?”

  “Are you going to do as I ask?” Trixie’s voice wavered and she retracted her fangs. “Will you stay away from here, from Chelsea’s house?”

  “On one condition,” he murmured. His full lips curved and he tugged her closer.

  “Fine.” Trixie swallowed the rising swell of desire as his firm, muscular legs brushed against hers. “What?”

  “Did I get your favorite musician right?”

  “Yes.” She suppressed a grin because he’d hit the nail on the head. “Fine. Yes, you did. Those are my two favorites. Okay?”

  “Good.” Dakota abruptly dropped her hands and stepped away. The warmth from his body dissipated swiftly as the space between them increased. “Now, are you gonna tell me why you’re comin’ out here all the time, or what?”

  “You’re a piece of work.” Trixie almost laughed out loud. He’d guessed her favorite musician and now wanted to know everything else? What-freaking-ever. “No. Like I said, my secrets are exactly that. Secrets. And if you know what’s good for you, you won’t come out here again, let alone follow me around like a creep. I don’t, like, need some throwback from the fifties tailing me on my nights off. Got it?”

  “Is that so?” Irritation flickered across his face. “You know, missy, I only came out here because your maker and the rest of that crazy-ass coven told me I had to check up on you. I’ll be happy to let you run all over creation all by your pretty little self if that’s what you—”

  Dakota stopped speaking mid-sentence when a gust of wind rushed over them. It whispered over Trixie from behind, sending a tiny tornado of leaves whirling around them. A growl rumbled in Dakota’s throat. His nostrils flared and he bared his fangs as he looked past her to the driveway of the house. Before she could say a word, he flew over to the gravel-covered drive and tilted his nose to the sky.

  “What are you bugging out about?” Trixie flew over to him and landed on the steps of the house. There was no way she was letting him in there. “No one here but you, me, and forest creatures. Jeez, what’s your damage?”

  “How long you been comin’ out here?” he asked as he scanned the area like the trained sentry he was. Any and all humor had vanished; he’d gone from good old boy to lethal weapon in a matter of seconds. “You run into any trouble out here on your visits? Supernatural or otherwise? Notice anythin’ out of the ordinary?”

  “No.” She sat on the top step of the porch in a not-so-subtle attempt to block the entrance. She was getting a weird feeling in her gut, the one that warned her trouble was coming. “I’ve been visiting ever since she moved out of the city. Not that it’s any of your business, but I like to check on the woman who lives here. That’s all. No trouble. No drama. She’s just a human woman living her life.”

  “Right,” Dakota said tightly. His jaw clenched and the muscle there flickered with tension. “Chelsea, is it?”

  “Whatever.” Shit. Trixie cracked her knuckles and rose to her feet. She’d let the girl’s name slip. “Yeah. But she’s gone now and we should be too. Let’s go.”

  “Why is she important to you?” Dakota strode slowly toward her, the gravel crunching beneath his heavy boots. All of the sweetness was gone from his voice and his expression was tense and serious—a side she rarely saw. “Who is she? What do you know about her?”

  “I know enough, and you know too much.”

  Before he could respond, Trixie shot up into the air and landed on top of a small pine tree. She braced her feet on the top branch and clung to the trunk with one hand. She peered down at Dakota, who remained on the ground.

  “And one more thing, cowboy,” she shouted down to him.

  “Ma’am?”

  “Keep your hands to yourself.” She smirked.

  “I’ll try.” Dakota slipped his hands in his pockets and flashed a fang-filled grin at her, his white teeth glinting in the moonlight.

  “You’ll try?” Trixie scoffed. “How about you give me your word?”

  “No way, darlin’.” He flew to the roof of the house and landed noiselessly in a crouching position, a cocky grin curving his firm-looking lips. “I’m not makin’ any promises I don’t aim to keep.”

  Trixie let out a sound of disgust as Dakota shot into the moonlit night and streaked across the sky like a bullet, leaving a trail of mist in his wake. She wanted to tell him “fat chance,” and no way was he gonna touch her again. But deep down, underneath the stream of protests, was a long silent voice of desire that whispered…yes.

  Chapter 4

  Monday afternoon, Dakota woke up before the sun went down. He had barely slept after the run-in with Trixie, and he couldn’t stop thinking about the scent he’d detected at the cabin. It had been over fifty years since he’d been exposed to that pungent aroma. It was so faint at first that he wasn’t sure if he’d really smelled what he thought he did.

  A gargoyle.

  Eons ago they had been protectors for the humans but eventually their lust for gold took over and they abandoned humanity. As far as Dakota was concerned, gargoyles had no honor. Many in the supernatural world thought gargoyles were only a few years from extinction. Hell, some folks already thought they were. And that would be fine with Dakota.

  He might not have smelled that scent in decades but there was no mistaking it. That particular brand of stink had been burned into his brain with painful clarity. Hell, yes. A gargoyle had definitely been at the human’s cabin in the woods but the real question was why? Why would a gargoyle be hanging around a human after all this time, and why the hell was Trixie mixed up with it all?

  He could go to the czars about his suspicion, but he didn’t want to cause a ruckus if he could avoid it. Especially since it was connected to whatever Trixie was hiding.

  Right after Dakota had been turned, he and his maker were assigned a top secret mission to eliminate as many gargoyles as possible. They were considered a danger to the entire supernatural community. Driven by greed and their obsession with gold, they exhibited risky behavior. Some had even allowed themselves to be seen by humans with increasing frequency, and that wasn’t good for anyone. The top secret directive came straight from Emperor Zhao, and Dakota’s maker, Jonner, had told him he was never to speak of it. Ever. Then Jonner got dusted, the gargoyle activity basically died out, and Dakota got himself signed up as a sentry.

  If that human girl was mixed up with gargoyles, she was in a heap of trouble. They were dangerous and had no honor. Gargoyles cared for no one other than themselves and for nothing other than finding their long-lost gold.

  Greedy assholes.


  Dakota locked his apartment door and made his way down to the basement of the building. He passed a few other tenants, all of them human, but none of them gave him more than a cursory nod of the head. New York was not the friendliest place; moments like this made him miss the warmth of Texas.

  Luckily the laundry room was empty when he got there, and he was able to slip into the utility closet without any drama.

  He didn’t bother turning on the light; he could see easily in the pitch-black space. As with all vampires, he had night vision. When humans saw nothing, his world was sepia-toned. He pressed the tile along the top edge of the wall and a moment later the secret door slid open, giving him access to the underground tunnel network that ran beneath the city.

  Dakota flew through the narrow halls with ease. Patrol, as always, was due to start at sundown and he had to watch over his section of the city, but he needed to see Trixie first. He had to get her to trust him so that she would tell him what in the hell she was hiding. If a gargoyle was loitering in the area, then it was his duty as a sentry to put it down. His curiosity was driven by far more personal reasons.

  Trixie.

  The spunky vampire occupied his every waking thought, and now that he’d touched her, felt her smooth silky flesh beneath his—he wanted more. He was unreasonably drawn to her, and if he was honest with himself, he had been since his first day in the city. Hell, the gals he had dated during his time as a human were nothing like Trixie, and that’s why he liked her so much. The women of his era had been prim, proper, perfectly coiffed, and soft-spoken. There was no challenge. No fire. Trixie was the exact opposite. She was…unexpected.

  He rounded a sharp turn to the right, and a few minutes later he arrived at the entrance to The Coven. The vampire-run nightclub operated out of an old church in Greenwich Village, and even though the music wasn’t to his taste, Dakota had to admit they ran a top-notch joint. He slipped in the entrance and made his way up the winding staircase to the door that led to the club office. He probably could have gone right in, but that still felt rude.

  He rapped on the door, listening for any sign of Sadie. She was a member of Olivia’s coven, the owner of the nightclub, and mated to the werewolf prince, Killian Bane. She and Bane had been in Alaska for the past few weeks visiting the Werewolf Society territory and doing their duty as senators and interracial liaisons for the Presidium. They weren’t supposed to be back in New York for another week or so, but for all he knew, they’d come home early.

  Vampires hookin’ up with werewolves. Vampires havin’ babies. And now there was a gargoyle in the area.

  Weird damn coven.

  “Come on in, Dakota.” Damien’s deep baritone came through the door before it slid open. He extended his hand and rose from the chair at the desk. “Hey, man. What are you doing here?”

  “I could ask you the same question.” Dakota moved into the small cozy office as the panel slid shut, and then he shook Damien’s hand. “I thought you were the bouncer of this joint. The muscle.”

  “I am.” Damien flashed a toothy white grin. “But Sadie has me run the show when she has to do her diplomat stuff in Alaska with Killian. I like it. It gives me a chance to exercise my brain and not just my brawn.”

  “That’s a crazy thing, isn’t it?”

  “What?” Damien winked. “That I’ve got brains?”

  “Nah, man. Sadie and Killian. I mean who would have thought that the heir to the Werewolf Society throne would be the bloodmate of a vampire? That’s some wild business.” Dakota headed for the door that led out to the club but paused for a moment and studied Damien carefully. “Next thing you know, Olivia will be welcoming gargoyles into her coven.”

  “Now that is crazy.” Damien laughed and his massive shoulders shook with each deep chuckle. “Gargoyles? Come on, man. You know they’re practically extinct. Even if there are any left, they stay hidden in the shadows. No way. I think it’s safe to say there won’t be any gargoyles hanging around The Coven anytime soon. Besides, I heard they stink to high heaven.”

  “Yeah, me too.” Dakota nodded and gave him a tight smile. “I best be gettin’ on my way or Shane will have my hide. He’s a bossy old son of a gun.”

  “Hey.” Damien’s deep baritone stopped him in the doorway. Damn. He’d almost made a clean exit. “Why are you here anyway? The club isn’t open for the night yet. No bad guys to watch in there.”

  “It’s not a guy I’m interested in.” He tilted his head in deference and grinned. “I won’t keep her but a minute or two.”

  Dakota strode down the hall to the main room of the club without waiting for a response. Music, something loud with a heavy bass beat, flowed through the cavernous space and bounced off the walls like it was trying to escape. It only took a second to find Trixie. She was behind the bar, exactly where he thought she’d be, and the woman was dancing like no one was watching. Movement to his left captured his attention. It was the DJ, Justine. The tattooed and heavily pierced vamp was up on the DJ platform waving at him, but Dakota pressed a finger to his lips as he moved silently toward the bar. She gave him a thumbs-up and kept on with her business.

  Trixie was singing along with the music and dancing as she stocked the top-shelf liquors. Her body—toned, curvy, and athletic—swayed hypnotically to the beat and Dakota found himself entranced. She was clad in a black tank top and skintight black jeans, and a series of colorful rubber bracelets adorned her wrists. Her hair, which had been pink and black yesterday, was now blond with streaks of bright blue and styled in her usual messy way. Like she’d just rolled outta bed. He had the urge to run his fingers through it.

  In that moment, it was crystal clear why he found her so intriguing. The women of his day had been so perfectly coiffed, with not a hair out of place. What you saw was what you got. That’s how it was back then. Men were men. Women were women. Everyone knew their role and played it to perfection.

  But Trixie… Well, this gal was another story altogether.

  She looked like a tough girl, like she was ready for anything, but Dakota had long suspected she was nothing like the woman she pretended to be. Last night’s encounter had confirmed it. The role she’d assigned herself, the badass punk rock chick, was a cover for someone far more interesting. That was the woman he wanted to discover.

  Dakota sidled up to the bar and stood silently, waiting for her to notice his presence. He wasn’t in a rush. He was having too much fun enjoying the show. Trixie bent down to grab two more bottles of booze, and when she stood up, he caught her eye in the mirror behind the bar.

  The beat of the music pulsed insistently but neither of them moved.

  Her pale amber gaze remained locked with his for several beats of the song. The house lights in the club dimmed, and at the same moment the lights above the dance floor flickered to life. Reds. Blues. Pinks. Greens—the space became awash in a kaleidoscope of colors, but Trixie stood out like a beacon, shining above everything else.

  Then the house lights came on with a hollow click, the colors vanished, and the music fell silent. The moment broken, Trixie tore her gaze from his and shoved the bottles onto the shelf.

  “AV is ready to roll,” Justine shouted from her perch. “Hey, Dakota. How’s it hangin’, gov?”

  “Fine, thanks.” Dakota waved over his shoulder but kept his attention on Trixie. “Always a pleasure to see you, Miss Justine.”

  “Right then.” Justine snorted with laughter. She flew down from her perch and headed for the office. “I’ll see you two in a bit. Need to take care of somethin’ b’fore the doors open.”

  “What are you doing here?” Trixie looked at the large black watch strapped to her wrist before grabbing the empty box. “Aren’t you supposed to be on patrol or something? Y’know, protecting the city from the rando supernatural freaks who don’t follow the Presidium’s rules.”

  “Hey, Dakota!” Maya’s perk
y voice drifted over his shoulder as she whisked past him and hopped behind the bar. She stood in front of Trixie, blocking her exit, and grabbed the edge of the box in Trixie’s hands. “I’ll take that out to the Dumpster. The sun just went down. Besides, that will give you time to chat with Dakota.”

  “I got it,” Trixie said through clenched teeth. She tugged the box away and slipped around her fellow bartender. “And I don’t need to chat with him. He has to go to work, which is what we should be doing too. I already stocked the top shelf, but you can check the beer.”

  “Fine,” Maya huffed. “Why are you so cranky?”

  Trixie mumbled something incoherent and strode toward the bright red Exit sign at the end of the dark hallway.

  “I’ll walk you out.” Dakota followed her to the back door that led to the alley and winked at Maya. “’Night, Maya.”

  “Good night, Dakota,” she sang. Her knowing giggle faded as he strolled down the hallway after Trixie. “Good luck.”

  That was weird. Why would Maya be wishin’ him good luck?

  “Why are you following me?” Trixie sighed without looking back at him in the dark hallway. “Don’t you have a job to do? I mean one that doesn’t involve bugging me. Besides, Shane and Pete will have your ass if you aren’t out there by sundown,” she said, referring to the two other sentries.

  “I’ll be out there soon enough.” Dakota swept past her and opened the door to the alley for her. He held it open and stepped back into the dimly lit alley so she could pass. “But there’s somethin’ that’s been naggin’ at me all day. Woke me out of a dead sleep, as a matter of fact.”

  “Very funny.” Trixie rolled her eyes, but he didn’t miss the hint of a smile on her red lips as she swept past him and into the alley. “What is it?”

  The door shut with a dull clank. Trixie tossed the box into the Dumpster before turning around and almost walking face-first into his chest. Dakota had moved in so he was only a couple of feet behind her, and a look of surprise flickered briefly over her face. She stumbled backward, but he linked his arms around her biceps in a blur of speed and tugged her compact curvy body against his before she could bump into the metal Dumpster.

 

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