Thrown to the Wolves (Gemini Series)

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Thrown to the Wolves (Gemini Series) Page 5

by Hailey Edwards


  A flurry of knocks startled me to attention. I shut down my laptop then rose and peeked through the peephole. Jones. In civvies. A button-down shirt open to reveal a swath of throat. Nice jeans. Casual but dressy. He wore the outfit well. So well it hit me that his earlier polish must have been to impress me. I opened the door a crack and kept my gaze from wandering. “Did you need something?”

  He shoved his hands into his pockets. “Want to join me for dinner?”

  My heart flip-flopped. “That sounds like a—”

  “Great idea.” Those damn dimples flashed. “I thought so too.”

  “We’re working a case together.” I strove for professionalism. “This—me and you—the flirting. It can’t happen.”

  “Fraternization laws don’t apply.” He rocked back on his heels. “Technically, you’re from a different division than me. We might both be on loan to the same outpost, but this is a temporary assignment. That gives us wiggle room.”

  I wet my lips. “You’ve thought about this.”

  He shrugged. “You did your research, I did mine.”

  “Is this because of your dissertation? Are you some kind of psycho stalker?” I wracked my brain for an answer that made sense. “You’re not a warg, are you? Your people don’t believe in those predestined mates, do they?”

  “Maybe a little, I hope not, no, and it’s complicated.”

  Uh-oh. “How complicated?”

  “I’m an elf.” He glanced both ways down the hall then released the glamour I hadn’t realized he was wearing. He thumped one of his gently pointed ears. “We’re betrothed in the cradle. My people grow up knowing who their future spouse will be, so every attempt is made to encourage attachment prior to the final bonding.”

  Relief and a pulse of an undefinable emotion zinged through me. “So, you’re engaged?”

  His glamour snapped back into place. “Would I be here asking you to dinner if I was?”

  “I’ve known you for eight hours. You can’t possibly expect me to know the answer.”

  “Fair point.” He huffed out a breath. “Okay, so I’m not an elf so much as I’m half elf and half human.” His hands fisted in his pants. “Elves are particular about bloodlines. Having a human father meant not even my mother, a high regent, could arrange for a match. If no such agreement is reached by a child’s first year of life, they’re considered banes. Outcasts.” Another shrug drew up his shoulders. “So, you’re safe from any predestined mating with me.”

  A sense of kinship blossomed in me, and I found myself admitting, “I get that. Vamps are particular about lineage too. Life, food, legacy. It’s all about blood for them.” Hope sparkled in his expression, and I cursed under my breath, which caused his lips to twitch. “Fine. I’ll eat dinner with you, but only because I’m hungry.” I jutted out my chin. “You’re too young for me.”

  “Have you ever considered that, being half vampire, you’re close to immortal? At some point, most everyone will be younger than you. You’ll have to start cradle robbing eventually. Why not practice on me?”

  “Out.” I shooed him into the hall and changed into a floral sundress. Not because I wanted to look nice for him, but because it was a balmy night and the ocean breeze would feel good on my skin. Ten minutes later, I was ready to go and locked up my room behind me. “Where did you have in mind?”

  His eyes sparkled with mischief. “I read that—”

  I released an audible groan.

  This was a mistake. A huge lapse in judgment. I was in the middle of a case. And Jones, who had yet to see north of thirty, was nursing a crush on a fictional representation of me.

  “—this new place opened near Saddler’s Village. It’s more of a glorified seafood shack, but I figured since you’re new to the islands that might appeal.”

  “You played me.” I stood there stunned, having expected him to hurl quotes at me again, but the boy was a quick study.

  “Baby, you walked right into that one.” He ran his knuckles down my cheek. “I couldn’t help myself. I promise to behave myself for the rest of the night.”

  “Don’t bother,” I said, knowing I was inviting trouble. “I’ve got a bead on you now, Jones.”

  “Is that so?” He appeared delighted at the prospect. “You think I can’t be good?”

  “I think…” I debated how to put it nicely then decided to hell with being polite. “You’re a good-looking man, you’re smart as a whip, and you slay people with your dimples. Seriously, you could inflict a mortal wound with that sharp tongue of yours, and your victim would be too blinded by the crease in your cheek to care.”

  Too late I realized my mistake. I’d thought I had seen him smile, but I was wrong. There were the polite smiles I had been on the receiving end of since my arrival, and there was the seductive twist of his lips facing me now. He must have practiced in the mirror. That was the only reason I could fathom for how he had managed to deepened his dimples exponentially.

  “Lena, are you saying I affect you?”

  Worry that he had glimpsed my fangs earlier, that he might be fishing for confirmation, broke sweat down my spine. He had no way of knowing how affected I had been, right?

  “I’m saying seafood sounds good.” I brushed past him on the way to his car. “Let’s go.”

  Grinning like a fool, he went.

  Chapter 4

  Rocco’s On the Beach was a dive of the highest order, the walls surrounding the kitchen nothing more than weathered pallets tacked into a lopsided rectangle that poured smoke from the cooking pit through the cracks. A patchwork of tarps secured first at the roof and then by bungee cords to nearby palm trees created a covered eating area. Music blared through speakers mounted on the trunks, and someone’s iPhone provided the tracks. Under the billowing material, a half-dozen plastic tables with matching sun-bleached chairs gave diners the option of sitting at their table or hauling their seat out to watch moonlight glitter on the waves.

  Figuring I would feel safer with a table between me and Jones, I snagged a menu and sat. He followed suit, dialing back the dimples so I could focus on the offerings.

  “What looks good to you?” He skimmed the listing.

  “The special.” Fresh lobster with lemon-herb butter served with corn on the cob, Johnny cakes and a baked potato. “Not bad for twenty bucks.” A worrisome thought occurred to me, and I jumped in front of it. “That reminds me. This date is Dutch.”

  “I expected no less.” He sounded pleased. “Can I buy you a drink at least?”

  “A Corona.” I could bend that much. “Why are you smiling? Must you torment me?”

  I was only half kidding. Until meeting him, I’d had no idea dimple fetishes were a thing.

  “You called this a date.” He sat up taller in his chair. “Let me enjoy the moment.”

  Sighing in his general direction, I waved over a local teen with dark skin and darker eyes dressed in cut-off shorts that consisted of pockets strung from a waistband and a pink bikini. Long ropes of hair cascaded over her shoulders, and matching pink beads capped the ends. They click-clacked when she moved, and the sound brightened the night.

  “Two specials,” I ordered for us since he had yet to settle on a choice.

  “Two Coronas,” he countered, unfazed by a woman ordering on his behalf.

  Our effortless rapport relaxed some part of me held tense until this moment. My last partner was as nice as he could be to my face while preaching “women belong in the kitchen” rhetoric behind my back. If I’d ordered for Dawes, he would have keeled over on the spot. It seemed Jones had passed a test I hadn’t realized I was administrating.

  “So,” he began.

  “So,” I echoed. “Is this the part where we reminisce about my old cases?”

  “Nah. I don’t want to be predictable.” He flicked away a mosquito. “I was hoping we could talk more about you. Likes, dislikes. That kind of thing.”

  I hesitated too long to be polite, but he didn’t seem to mind. “What do you wa
nt to know?”

  “Favorite color.”

  “Pink.”

  “Favorite song.”

  “Currently ‘All Time Low’ by Jon Bellion.”

  “Favorite pet when you were a kid.”

  “No pets allowed. Mom has allergies. Though my dream is to one day own a corgi.”

  “There’s a meme about those, right? Corgi butt or loaf of bread?”

  A smidgen of doubt had me wondering if he had researched my dog preference too, but I was pretty sure no one outside my family and a few friends had any idea I wanted to be a puppy momma one day when work quieted down and my life stabilized.

  “Yes, there is.” The pause in his interrogation was welcome, whatever his purpose, and turnabout was fair play. “What about you?”

  “Pink is also my favorite color. No, it’s true. One night I fell asleep on the couch while my sister was hosting a slumber party. She was ten. I was sixteen. She painted my nails pink and, much to her horror, I wore the polish until it chipped and flaked off. I adopted pink as my favorite color that day, and I’ll fight anyone who says otherwise.”

  “You have siblings?” I was an only child. Dhampirs were a rare breed given vampire-reproductive issues.

  “Just the sister. She’s nosey as all get out, and she’ll probably paint your nails if you fall asleep on her couch. Just sayin’. Fair warning and all.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind.” I kept my expression serious. “Should I ever end up unconscious on your sister’s couch.”

  The food arrived then, and we fell into a companionable silence. The food was mouth-wateringly good, the view spectacular, and the company… I had no complaints there either. Except maybe that it was difficult for him to both dimple and chew at the same time.

  We finished up, tipped the waitress and left our compliments with the chef, then walked on the beach. The moon hung heavy above us, and the crashing waves soothed parts of me that still felt raw all these months later. Maybe the higher-ups had known what they were doing after all. Maybe a change of scenery was just what the doctor ordered. I breathed easier here, away from the familiar, the things that triggered dark memories.

  “Can you surf?”

  “No.” I studied him. “Can you?”

  “Yep. I can teach you, once this is over.” He studied the glittering sea, a different sort of longing in his expression. “There’s nothing like it.”

  “Are you about to tell me surfing is better than sex?” I heard the doubt heavy in my voice.

  “Hell no.” He walked until the surf nursed his bare toes. “There’s only one thing better than sex.”

  Wary of his answer, I still asked, “What might that be?”

  “Sleep.”

  A chuckle bubbled up my throat.

  “After a sixteen-hour shift, there is nothing I want more than my bed. I’m sorry. It’s the truth.” He cast a sideways glance at me. “I hope that doesn’t cost me my street cred with you. I mean, if you were in my bed when I got there, I would at least be conflicted about it.”

  Laughing again for the dozenth time that night, I joined him in the foamy water and rested my head against his shoulder. Today had started out ugly, and tomorrow promised more of the same. One thing marshals learned early was to take happiness where and when we found it, because you never knew when you’d get your next dose of reality.

  Chapter 5

  A frantic shriek pierced the night, and reality came crashing down on us. A woman of Hispanic descent, her cruise line T-shirt labeling her as a tourist, arrowed toward us and grabbed me by the arm. I wasn’t surprised when she homed in on us. Cops were easy to spot once you knew what to look for, and clearly this woman had made us.

  “Officer,” she panted. “Please. There’s a man—” She flung her arm out behind her, and tears sprang into her eyes. “I was on a walk. Ay dios mio! I thought he was drunk and had fallen asleep, but I checked on him.” The panicked animal sound she made caused the predator in me to sit up and pay attention. “He was so cold. His neck. It was bloody. I think I—”

  She whirled to the side and emptied her stomach while I rubbed a hand up and down her back.

  “I’ll check it out.” I switched places with Jones then jogged toward a grouping of fancy loungers set out by one of the upscale restaurants on their private beach. I spotted a man reclining, legs crossed and gaze fixed on the ocean, shades covering eyes that would be clouded by now. The breeze caught his scent, and I smelled pungent halitosis on him long before I got close enough to check for his absent pulse. I called in the murder and circled the scene, snapping reference photos with my phone. “You just threw a monkey wrench in the works, mister.”

  The only common thread between our victims had been gender. This one, being male, broke that trend.

  I stayed with him until backup arrived then left the techs to start processing the scene and hunted down Jones. He had taken the woman, Hazel Vasquez, to the table where we had eaten dinner. She sat hunched over a small glass of clear liquid that might have been water or something stiffer while Jones scribbled notes in his ever-present notebook. I walked up behind her but didn’t interfere with the rapport he had established.

  “Did you see anyone else near the victim?” he was asking.

  “A shadow,” she murmured. “It was this hunched, blackened thing. I thought my eyes were playing tricks on me.”

  “That’s why you decided to check on the man?”

  “Yes.” She rubbed her hands up her arms. “It looked…wrong.”

  “Did you see where it came from?” He was careful to ignore me, allowing me to act as an impartial observer. “Where it went?”

  “It ran toward the villa.” Her voice faltered. “It was more of a limp, really. I thought it would fall before it reached the patio.”

  “It? Do you think the person you saw fleeing was male or female?”

  “That thing wasn’t human.” Her hand flew to her throat. “There were puncture marks here.” A nervous laugh bubbled up her throat. “Madre would say it was el chupacabra, but that’s a silly superstition.”

  Jones graced her with a tight smile. Superstitions were rooted in reality, and our reality was far different from hers or her mom’s.

  “Wait here, ma’am, and an officer will drive you back to your hotel.” He stood and gestured over a marshal who had taken up a position similar to mine, content to watch Jones work, and he let her handle getting Ms. Vasquez back to her room. After the witness left, he crossed to me. “You sure know how to show a guy a good time.”

  Humor was the antidote to working one too many crime scenes, so I played along to dull the edge of horror that another life had been lost. “I aim to please.”

  His grin was a dimpleless flicker. “What did you find?”

  “Male victim. Marks on his neck mirror those found on the women. The scent I picked up on the first victim was present on him as well. He hasn’t been dead long. If I had to guess, I’d say our killer was dining around the same time as us.”

  Awareness a crime had been perpetrated while we sat less than a half mile down the beach caused the food that had been so delicious going down to roil in my gut. We couldn’t work twenty-four hours a day. We had to stop and eat sometime. But the fact I had let the case go, let myself enjoy Jones’s company, made it a bitter pill to swallow.

  “Don’t,” he said, reading me as though I were an open book. Perhaps for him I was. “This was not your fault. This didn’t happen because you let your hair down for a few hours.”

  “I know.” But knowing and accepting were two different things. “All the same, I think we should cool this, whatever this is, until we close the case.”

  “Is this a brush-off?” His shoulders tensed as though preparing for me to land a physical blow.

  Aware we were being watched by other marshals, and unwilling to provide more gossip fodder, I refrained from grabbing his hand. “No.” I pushed out a dramatic sigh. “There’s something about you, Jones. You’re too young an
d too pretty for me, but you’re also smart and—”

  “I have dimples,” he added sagely.

  I mashed my lips into a flat line.

  “I won’t hesitate to use them,” he warned. “I’ll give you until the case ends, but the second we get this nutjob locked up, I’m asking you out on a second date.”

  I almost protested the label, but I had been the one who slipped up and called dinner the D word. “Fine.”

  “One last question before we put this on hold.”

  “Hit me.”

  “Would you have let me kiss you good night?”

  I snorted and spun on my heel. “Guess you’ll never know, Dimples.”

  Chapter 6

  We searched the villa and the patio, which reminded me of a tropical garden spiked with enormous, trumpetlike umbrellas to protect guests from the sun portion of the sand and sun equation. We came up with nothing. No blood. No obvious tracks—there were simply too many footprints in the sand to distinguish one set from another. No convenient witnesses to point us thataway.

  “We’re missing something.” I leaned on the railing overlooking the beach and strived for perspective. “What was the killer doing on this end of the island? The other bodies were found within a half mile of each other. This one is two parishes away.”

  “You think it followed us.” He didn’t make it a question.

  “Is that so crazy?” I glanced at Jones, who had adopted the same pose as me. “Maybe it scented us at the scene and trailed us.”

  “Chupacabras are too animalistic to comprehend the idea of a car or travel,” he mused. “Looks like we’ve cleared our first suspect. The killer must possess higher reasoning skills, and speed, to track us this far. The average speed limit was forty-five miles per hour.”

  Fast and lethal with one heck of a parched throat. And then there was the smell to consider…

  “The volume of blood consumed is what worries me most.” Outside the fact three people had died to supply the killer. “My gut says we’re dealing with one killer. But the math doesn’t work. There must be more than one.”

 

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