Since he couldn’t determine which of the guys at the locks was the stalker, he’d ushered Veronica out of there as quickly as possible.
There was no messing around anymore.
Logan had told Veronica he was going to send her latest note to a guy for analysis, but it wasn’t necessary. He could pick up the traces of blood from where he stood in front of the flower shop. The sick bastard had written the “love note” with his own blood.
Pulling in behind her, Logan parked on the street in front of the Veronica Vale Weddings offices. She climbed out of her car, tugged down her skirt, and slammed the door behind her. He didn’t know why they were at her office, but this was a hell of a lot better than sneaking down the street and watching her from afar. He pushed the front door open wide and held his breath as she swept by.
At the front counter, a secretary held out a puffy white envelope, the kind that people used to send pictures or small valuables. “For you, Miss Vale,” she said. “It came in with this morning’s mail drop.”
Taking the envelope, Veronica opened it up and reached inside. She pulled out a white postcard, read, and stopped.
“Logan.” Her voice shook. “Read this.”
He grabbed the card and read: You looked radiant today, but you always do. I’m more convinced than ever that we’d be perfect together. The time is coming for us to meet. I’ll see you at your sister’s wedding this weekend. Until then…
“He’ll be at my sister’s wedding.” Veronica covered her mouth with her hand.
“Not really.” Logan flicked the edge of the card. This one was written in the same fine blood print as the last one. What’d the guy do? Drain his blood and then siphon it into a ballpoint? “Your sister’s wedding is next weekend. Is he planning to meet you this weekend at the Sanchez wedding, or next weekend at your sister’s?”
“Oh.” She started down the winding hall to the right, toward her office. “I hadn’t read it that carefully.”
“As Pussy from Floral and Fauna would say”—Logan winked, though waves of anxiety sloshed in his stomach.—“there’s a simple solution to the problem.”
She unlocked her office and stepped inside. The room was spacious, with bushy ficus trees in each corner and a cherrywood desk in the center. Pink roses filling tall glass vases perched on each edge, facing two leather-wrapped chairs for potential clients to kick back and get their wedding questions answered.
“And that is?” she asked, sliding into the seat behind her desk.
“Don’t go to the Sanchez wedding and help me find him before your sister’s.”
She cringed. “I have to go. It’s the biggest event in Seattle. Two hundred and fifty people are going to be there.”
Logan leaned back in one of the chairs across from her desk. “I don’t think you understand the danger you’re in.” When she didn’t speak, he continued. “Fine. You’ll need to follow the same routine, as if you didn’t know someone was watching. But you have to be hyperaware of your surroundings at all times. If you spot anything out of the ordinary, let me know immediately.”
“What am I supposed to be looking for?” Veronica asked, fiddling with the edges of the envelope. “I don’t even know.”
“Anyone who follows you or holds eye contact a little too long is suspect. Likewise, look for someone darting out of your path too suddenly or averting eye contact when you’re holding it.”
She whacked the envelope against the desk. “So basically, look for anyone doing anything. Boy, that’s helpful.”
“I know it sounds overwhelming, but that’s why Jake hired me to help.”
When Veronica’s fingers skimmed the bottom of the envelope, she frowned.
“What is it?” he asked.
“There’s more inside.” She flipped it upside down, and a few pictures fell out onto her desk. “I didn’t realize…”
Logan slid off his chair and went palms-down on the desk. The pictures accompanying the postcard were taken at the Grady wedding. There was one of Veronica standing by Heather near the bar, though half of Heather’s body was cut out of the frame. Veronica looked to be laughing, throwing her head back as if Heather had said something funny. Another picture was of Veronica tweaking a flower pedestal before the wedding took place—the lens was focused on the round of her backside. Judging from the angle, it was taken from a seated position not far behind her. The third picture was the most alarming of all. Veronica in the parking lot, stranded in her car, right before Logan approached her about needing help.
The damn wolf had been right there, so close, and Logan had failed to pick up his scent. If he hadn’t offered Veronica assistance, how long would the stalker have waited before he made his move?
“He was there. The guy was really there. He was watching me the whole time.” Veronica brushed her fingers over the photos, studying them with a perplexed expression. “And he wants me to know he’s watching me. That’s probably the creepiest part. Who would do something like this?”
“It’s probably a disgruntled ex-boyfriend who can’t let you go.” Bending down, Logan readjusted the knife on his boot. “Any of those around?”
“Yeah, like I’d date a werewolf.” Veronica scooped the pictures into the envelope and dropped them into her top drawer. Then she pulled out a blank manila folder and dropped it on her desk. “That’d never happen.”
Logan’s heart squeezed, and he forced the wolf part of him to chill out. He didn’t want to date Veronica. Didn’t want to get any closer to her than he had to. His mother and stepfather had bonded for life, and look what happened to them. They’d loved each other, sure, but they’d also fought nonstop. When Logan reached sixth grade, they decided they wanted to roam the world without a child attached to their side. They left him to fight for his own survival, and if it hadn’t been for the Alpha of the Seattle Wolf Pack taking him in, he’d be in jail or dead. Completing the Luminary bond seriously screwed with people’s heads; his mother had put her relationship with Logan’s stepfather over her own son. There was no way he was following in his parents’ matrimonial footsteps.
“I know it sounds crazy, but I’m a little disappointed in the whole thing,” Veronica continued, flipping through her notes. “I was flattered that there was a guy out there who would care enough to send me love notes and buy me flowers. No guy had ever done that for me before.”
“I find that hard to believe.”
“It’s the truth. I’m usually the one giving everything of myself for barely anything in return. I think I expect too much. That has to be the problem.” She tapped the back end of a pen against her lips. “To be honest, that was part of the reason I wanted to sleep with you. You told me exactly what to expect, one night, that was it. Although the way you left pissed me off, at least you gave me the courtesy none of my exes did.”
“Not that I’m complaining, because I had a great time with you last night,” Logan said. “But it sucks that you’ve had to give so much of yourself to losers who didn’t appreciate you.”
She smirked. “Don’t patronize me, Logan.”
“I’m serious.” It surprised him that he truly was. “The men you’ve dated before had to be losers, because a real man would treat you right and cherish you the way you deserve. A real man would stay at your side and feed you ice cream. In bed. Every night for the rest of your life.”
Where’d that come from?
Veronica gaped, the light in her brown eyes beginning to dance.
“What I meant was,” Logan said, clearing his throat, “don’t be disappointed about the love notes. If a guy is sending you anonymous letters, he’s not the one for you. The right guy will tell you he loves you to your face, and when he kisses you, you’ll know it by the curl of your toes.”
“Thanks for the advice, Casanova, but you’re not exactly an expert. How long was your longest relationship? Two days?”
He shrugged, thinking about all the girls who had meant nothing to him. But he’d never been dishonest with any of
them. Never promised a future that he couldn’t give them. For the first time, he felt that he meant the words coming out of his mouth. Veronica did deserve someone who would curl her toes. A man who would tell her he loved her and mean it.
“I’ll be the first to admit that I haven’t been a gleaming example of long-term monogamy.”
“Understatement of the century.” A tiny smile curled the corner of Veronica’s lips. “I knew you were a heartbreaker the first moment I saw you.”
“Is that right?”
She nodded and bit her bottom lip. “Since we’re going to be hanging out a lot together this week, it’s a good thing we’re sticking to those one-night-stand rules of yours.”
His stomach dropped as he fought to keep his eyes connected with hers. “You’re right. It’s best if we keep everything strictly business.”
“I agree.” Her gaze said something different. “I have to protect this heart of mine.”
She was teasing him, and damn if he didn’t like it.
“So what should I do about the pictures?” Veronica asked, brushing her hands up and down her arms.
“Shred them.” Logan exhaled heavily, wishing he could ease her worries. “And trust that I’ll find this guy before he gets the chance to take more.”
Chapter Nine
The grinding sound of a lawn mower woke Veronica from her slumber. Moaning, she buried her head under her pillow and pulled the edges down over her ears to block the noise. At her feet, Cocoa meowed, then meandered onto the pillow on top of her head. She was too tired to tell her only friend that her pillow was not a new cat bed, so she reached up and stroked the cat’s back. Veronica was tired and drained from having pulled two all-nighters in a row. Her eyes ached and her brain was fuzzy. All she wanted was another hour of sleep. Just an hour. Maybe two.
It was Saturday, for crying out loud. Who mowed their lawn at daybreak on Saturday?
The swaying groan of the lawn mower as it came closer, then faded away, made her back teeth grind. It sounded as if it was coming from outside her window, but that couldn’t be right. She could almost imagine Logan mowing his lawn, shirtless, his muscles flexing as he pushed the machine across the lawn and back. If it wasn’t for the irritation growing in her belly, she might’ve fallen back asleep and had very good dreams about his muscles flexing while he was performing other hard labor. She may not have wanted to have anything serious with Logan, the player of the year, but that didn’t mean she couldn’t fantasize about the downright delicious man.
A dog barked. There were shouts. It was Logan’s voice, rough and commanding. He was definitely the mowing culprit. The dog barked again, over the sound of the grass-chewing machine. God, she hated canines in every form.
How long was Logan going to mow? Another hour? He didn’t have that much lawn.
“I have a patch of grass you can mow,” she mumbled with a smile, and tried to fall back into that kind of a dream.
They’d been together all week, and although Veronica never would’ve thought it, Logan was a great help. He’d gone with her to every appointment, had stayed out of the way while she took care of business, and for lunch and dinner he’d taken her out. They’d gone dutch on all the bills so far, although he’d fought hard each time to absorb her portion. She didn’t have to worry if the werewolf following her was going to show up—she felt safe with Logan at her side. He was always on watch, always on alert.
It was an odd feeling…trusting someone to take care of her when she was used to taking care of herself.
She’d received an envelope with notes and pictures every day in the mail. Some of the pictures were of her car in front of a restaurant she’d visited for dinner one night. Others were of the outside of her office building, the photo zoomed in through the open blinds of her office window. The more pictures showed up, the edgier Logan became. She had the distinct feeling he’d never taken this long to solve a problem like this.
She still couldn’t believe that the ink analysis results on the letters had come back as blood. Now, before she took the mail out of her box, she put on gardening gloves. And shuddered when she looked at the darkening shades of red. The mere thought of someone writing the notes in blood was appalling. Seriously sick and twisted.
The mowing continued, grating on her last nerve. Sleep was no longer a possibility.
“That’s it. No more.” Veronica slid Cocoa off the pillow and jerked the covers off. Sliding out of her cocoon, Veronica fumbled down the hallway, into the front room, and yanked open the front window. The sun was blinding. She gasped when she peeked beneath her lids. Logan wasn’t mowing his lawn. He was mowing hers. “Logan!”
That clumsy old dog was jumping up and down frantically, barking at the base of the mower each time his fat paws hit the ground.
“Hey!” Veronica pinched her eyes shut. “Logan!”
The engine of the mower died.
“Morning, Sunshine!” he called out. He was close to her window.
She backed away. “What are you doing? Your lawn is over there.” She scrubbed her eyes, but couldn’t open them. Not yet. If she kept her eyes shut and only mumbled the words, she wouldn’t wake up completely. She could go back to bed and pretend the day hadn’t started yet. She could slip right back into the dream where Logan was beside her, stroking her to another climax.
“I know where my lawn is, but thanks for pointing it out. I finished mine, noticed that yours could use a run-through, and thought you wouldn’t mind.”
“What I wouldn’t mind is another hour of sleep.”
“Rough night?” Why did his voice sound shaky, like he was holding back a laugh?
“Yeah, you could say that.” She swallowed cotton. She needed water. “I was up all night fixing the favors.”
“I offered to help.” Logan’s dog barked, and Veronica swore it was so loud that it busted her eardrums. “Redoing two hundred favors had to suck.”
She cringed at the memory that was too fresh in her mind. The bride had changed the color of the ribbons from sky blue to turquoise and had decided she wanted mints stuffed into the tiny plastic champagne flutes instead of almonds. She would’ve asked Heather to help, but she was busy tweaking the seating arrangements for the reception. The bride came back with a few “minor” changes that of course ended up being major. Certain people RSVP’d last-minute and needed room where there wasn’t any, some couldn’t sit by the speakers, others by the bathroom, yada yada.
Another hour of sleep. That’s all it would take to make those favors a distant memory. “How much longer until you’re finished?”
“You have to leave soon, so another fifteen minutes maybe? Ten?”
Her eyes shot open at the words. Logan was shirtless. And sweating. And his muscles looked even larger than yesterday. Maybe that was because she could see them flex and bulge as he toyed with the mower handle and flicked the brake lever thingy. Or maybe it was the way the rays of the sun streaked over his body, casting an even tan across his skin.
“What time is it?” Backing away from the window, Veronica squinted at the time on the wall clock. Noon. “Shit!”
She’d slept in. Big-time.
She had so much to do before the wedding at two. She had to get ready. Drive to Everett, to the Nightshade hotel, drop off the favors, and check the setup of tables and chairs. She had to race to the church, make sure everyone was in their place, tweak a few decorations, then talk to the bride and groom.
Veronica slammed the window shut and ran down the hall to her room. Outside, the mower hacked and sputtered, and caught once more. She passed the bathroom on the way to the wardrobe. At the glimpse of her reflection, she skidded to a stop. And backtracked.
“Noooo!” Gasping, Veronica stared at her reflection in the bathroom mirror. She had pink glitter glue smudged all over her face and blue glitter glue swirling in a swishy pattern across her forehead. Black bags drooped below her eyes and her chocolate-colored hair was frizzy, sticking up all over the place, and co
mpletely out of control. God, she looked like the Bride of Frankenstein! “No wonder Logan was laughing! Ugh.” She slapped her hand to her forehead. “Total disaster.”
She showered as quickly as she could—and cut herself while shaving around her knees—then slathered a hell of a lot of lotion over her body. She didn’t have enough time. She wasn’t going to be able to get to Everett, a town thirty minutes north of Seattle, with enough time to spare.
She was taking too long and running out of time.
“Damn it.” No time to squeeze into her Spanx. Dashing to the closet, she yanked a black dress off a hanger. It reached mid-thigh and ballooned a bit at the bottom. With a ballerina neckline, three-quarter-length sleeves, and seams that lined the sides, the dress fit her body perfectly, playing up her curves and flattening her stomach. It was her go-to classy number. It had a tie that was supposed to wrap around her waist, but it wasn’t on the hanger, so she ditched it. Running to the bathroom, Veronica fought her way into the dress, tugging the soft fabric down her thighs as she turned the corner into the bathroom.
“Veronica! You about ready?”
Logan. She hadn’t even heard him come in.
“Yeah, I uh…” She pulled her hair into a ponytail, cinched the tie tight, and smoothed down the sides. It didn’t work. Her hair wouldn’t tame. She yanked down her hair, ran a brush through it and tousled the sides. She hated leaving her hair down when she was working, but she couldn’t walk around with wild strands of hair jumping from her ponytail. “How’d you get in?”
“I knocked, but you didn’t answer,” he yelled from the living room. “I tried the door and it was open.”
She must’ve left it open last night when she let Cocoa back in. That wasn’t like her, but going to bed after three in the morning wasn’t like her either. No wonder she wasn’t firing on all pistons. She rubbed lotion over her face—no time for foundation—lined her eyes with Charming Charcoal, and smoothed strawberry-pink lip gloss over her lips.
Four Weddings and a Werewolf (Entangled Covet) Page 7