Tempest sighed and put down the wrench she had been using while double-checking her findings. She didn’t want to make any mistakes and miss buying a part she might need later on. It seemed unusually hot. She wiped the sweat from her face, and she thought about the night before. Syndil had been so sweet. While they talked, she had fixed a vegetable broth for Tempest. Tempest’s stomach seemed to rebel against the broth, but she didn’t want to hurt Syndil’s feelings, so she tried to eat it. Even so, without Darius’s aid she probably wouldn’t have kept it down.
Darius had been so quiet when he joined her. He watched her work on the truck, clearly unhappy when she made a list of things she would need that they didn’t already have. That meant she would have to make a trip to the nearest town during daylight hours. He hadn’t argued, but he told her he would sleep the sleep of humans, not Carpathians, so that he would be available should she need him.
Tempest cleaned up carefully as she contemplated what Darius might have meant. What was the difference? Would it somehow harm him? She knew none of his family members agreed with his decision, none of them liked it, yet no one argued with him or even went so far as to register a simple protest. Their uneasiness caught at her. She could tell none of them blamed her for Darius’s resolution, yet she knew they were concerned about Darius and what he was doing.
The money they had handed her so casually was quite substantial. She folded it, shoved it into her pocket, and resolutely climbed into the little sports car. She had a bad feeling about Darius coming to harm, so she wasn’t going to take any chances on getting lost. Twice last night she had driven the route to town with Darius beside her, just to reassure him she would be able to make her way there and back without a problem. Still, her sense of dread persisted. She just seemed to attract trouble everywhere she went.
Tempest enjoyed the solitude of the drive, the highway winding down a mountain, the tight turns, the speed and smoothness of the vehicle, but there was a heaviness in her heart, growing much more difficult to ignore. She found herself needing the touch of Darius’s mind. She actually felt grief seeping in, troubling thoughts. That something had happened to Darius. That he was lying hurt somewhere. That he was in danger. It was nonsense, her brain told her, but nevertheless she found herself wanting to weep uncontrollably.
Calistoga was pretty town, rather famous for its mud and mineral baths. She found the auto parts store without incident, purchased the supplies she needed, and made her exit. Thinking about Darius instead of watching where she was going, she nearly tripped over the man lounging against the little red car at the curb. The man steadied her easily even as he smoothly removed the packages from her arms and stowed them in her car. Tempest blinked up at him. He was looking at her as if he knew her. He wasn’t particularly tall, but he was handsome in a blond, surfer kind of way. “Do I know you?” she asked, unable to place him.
“My name is Cullen Tucker, ma’am,” he drawled with the slightest of Southern accents. He held out a photograph.
Biting her lip, realizing this was the trouble she had been expecting. Tempest glanced at the picture of herself. “Where in the world did you get that?” It was a great likeness of her, with butterflies thick in the air, alighting on her head and shoulders. Her arms were stretched out, and she was laughing. The sun was behind her, and her feet were in the stream.
Cullen examined her expression. “Did you know the man who took this photograph?”
“No. I certainly didn’t pose for it.” Tempest edged around him, preparing to bolt into the driver’s seat. She was an excellent driver, and more than once in her rather misspent youth she had even outrun the police. She had confidence in the car, too. If she could get behind the wheel, she would be gone.
“Don’t be frightened,” he said softly. “I’m actually trying to help you. Can we go somewhere to talk?”
“I’m in the middle of a big job,” she hedged.
“Please, it’s important. A few minutes. We’ll go somewhere public, so you won’t be afraid of me. I don’t want to sound dramatic, or like a nutcase, but it’s a matter of life and death,” he insisted.
Tempest closed her eyes for a moment, sighing in resignation. Of course it was a matter of life and death. What else would it be, when she was involved? She finally introduced herself, offering her hand. “I’m Tempest Trine.” There was something about Cullen Tucker that she couldn’t define, but she believed him to be inherently sincere. Simultaneously she wanted to groan aloud at her own introduction; Darius had her thinking of herself as Tempest instead of Rusti. It was pitiful that she couldn’t get out from under his spell for even a moment.
Cullen shook her hand gently. “Do you mind if we get something to eat? I’ve been traveling for a couple of days and didn’t take much time out.”
Tempest walked beside him, relieved that so many people were on the street. Cullen didn’t give her a bad feeling the way Matt Brodrick had, but she still preferred not to be alone with him.
Cullen waited until he had ordered his meal in a cafe they found before he started his explanation. “I’m going to tell you some pretty bizarre things. I want you to hear me out before you decide I’m crazy.” He tapped the photograph of her with one fingertip. “Some time ago I joined a secret society that believes that vampires really exist.”
Tempest felt the color drain from her face, and she sat back in her chair, needing the support. Before she could reply, Cullen held up a hand to stop her. “Just listen. Whether or not you believe there are vampires among us doesn’t really matter. What matters is that the people I was affiliated with believe it, and they are out to capture, dissect, and destroy any they might find. Some of them have gone completely off their rockers, I’m afraid. The singer that you’re traveling with—and don’t deny that you’re with her; I’ve done my home-work—is being targeted by the society. They’ve already made attempts on her life, and believe me, they’ll do it again.”
Tempest drummed her fingers nervously on the table-top. “Why aren’t you going to the police? Why tell me?”
“The police won’t believe me—you know that. But I can try to help you and maybe even your friend the singer. This picture was taken at the same place where they found Matt Brodrick’s body. He was part of the society, and, unfortunately for you, this picture condemns you in its eyes. They sent me to track you down and bring you back to them to see what they can learn about your group before... disposing of you. And I’m sure I’m not the only one they’ll be sending. I want to get you out of here, get you somewhere safe, where you can lay low until they lose interest in you.”
Tempest shook her head. “Just like that? I’m supposed to believe you and take off with you? If all this was true, the only thing I could do would be to warn Desari and the band, go to the police, and hope they catch these nuts.”
“Don’t be so damned stubborn,” Cullen hissed, leaning across the table, his face inches from hers. “I’m trying to save your life. These people are dangerous. They believe Desari is a vampire, and likely her new boyfriend, too. They are going to capture her or destroy her. Killing her would be doing her a favor, given what they have in mind as the alternative. But you’re first on their list, because they see you as a way to get information about her and her troupe. You have to go into hiding, get the hell away from the band. It’s your only choice, Tempest.”
“Do they think I’m a vampire? For God’s sake, they have a photo of me outdoors in broad daylight. I’m having lunch with you in a diner in the middle of the day,” she replied, exasperated but a little afraid. Darius was going to kill her when he realized she was having lunch alone with a man involved with human vampire-hunters and Matt Brodrick. Maybe she didn’t dare go back to the band. Maybe she would be leading the enemy straight to them.
“You’re no vampire,” Cullen said grimly. “I’ve seen a vampire, a real, honest-to-God vampire. Those idiots in the society have no idea what one of the undead is truly capable of doing. Desari is no vampire either. But they’re already suspicious of me, so I’m going to have to go into hiding, too. Likely they’ll send their ‘military’ after me because I know them all, their identities. I’ve seen their faces and been to their secret meetings. You have to come with me, Tempest.”
Tempest tilted her head to one side. She wasn’t a vampire, but there was something definitely different about her. She could hear Cullen Tucker’s heartbeat. A loud, strong, healthy pounding that echoed through her own bloodstream. She could hear the swish of water from the kitchen, the clink of individual dishes, the low murmur of conversation between the cook and a waitress. A couple across the room were have a whispered quarrel. She smelled food cooking, various perfumes and colognes, all mingling, overpowering each other until her stomach lurched from the onslaught.
Colors were vivid and bright, almost like when she was with Darius. She noticed the thin veins in the leaves of the daisy in the glass vase on the table, the extraordinary petals and each round pollen center. Her gaze hung there, entranced by the flower’s unusual beauty, the precise creation of nature.
“Tempest!” Cullen hissed across the table at her. “Are you even listening to me? For God’s sake, you have to believe what I’m telling you. I’m no crackpot. These people won’t stop. They’re hunting you. Let me at least get you to a safe place. I’ll try to protect you, although you’ll probably be safer without me. They might give up hunting you, but once they know I’ve betrayed them, they’ll never stop hunting me. You just have to hide out for a few months. And it’s imperative that you distance yourself from this group.”
“What about Desari? She’s done nothing wrong. If I go with you, these crazy, dangerous people will still be after her. Maybe this time they’ll kill her.” Tempest shook her head. “I can’t run away and leave her to them.”
Cullen wanted to reach across the table and shake her, grab her, and haul her little butt out of there. He had seen another woman die, one he loved, one with that same innocence in her eyes. “Damn it, you’re so stubborn, so unreasonable. They’ll get you, Tempest. If I was still with them, you’d already be on your way to their hideout.” Frustrated, he stared out the window, trying to think of anything that might convince her to leave with him. If she didn’t go, he would have to stay and try to protect her. And that meant he was going to die. He would have no chance at all.
Tempest remained silent while the waiter placed their plates in front of them. Immediately her stomach lurched at the overwhelming odor of food. She was no longer able to eat anything without Darius’s aid. Her insides had changed somehow. She didn’t know how she knew it, but she knew. It was the same as her enhanced hearing and eyesight.
“I can’t help but notice that you aren’t shocked and horrified at the idea that vampire-hunters are after you. Why is that?” Cullen’s blue eyes were serious, almost accusing. “Why is that you aren’t scoffing at the very idea of vampires?” he demanded.
Tempest indicated the picture. “Brodrick was always intimating that he thought Desari was a vampire. I thought he was an isolated nutcase, but now I can see he was part of a bigger organization. Why in the world did they settle on Desari? She’s so sweet to everyone. Why would they believe such a weird thing about her?”
“Her nocturnal habits. Her mesmerizing voice. And when they sent an organized paramilitary hit squad after her, she somehow managed to escape, while the’soldiers’ died or disappeared. These people were professional killers. They sprayed the stage with automatic gunfire, yet she escaped death.”
“That’s it? That’s why she’s a vampire?” She wanted to believe he was making up the entire thing, but she knew, deep in her heart, that he wasn’t.
“She stays up all night; no one has ever seen her during the day.”
“I’ve seen her during the day,” Tempest lied valiantly. She was becoming agitated. She couldn’t afford to get upset. Darius was so attuned to her, she knew it would disturb his sleep, and she was worried about his health since she had observed his family’s concern.
Cullen shifted position in the straight-backed chair and regarded her steadily. He shook his head and sighed as he picked up his fork. “You’re going to die, Tempest. And it won’t be an easy death. Damn it, why won’t you listen to me? I swear to you, I’m telling the truth.”
“I believe you. I don’t know why I believe you, it’s so absurd, but I do. I’m even fairly certain you aren’t trying to lure me into going with you to put me in their hands.” Tempest fiddled with her glass of water. She was beginning to sweat. Her head pounded. She needed to touch Darius. Just for a moment, just to assure herself he was really alive and well.
“Why don’t you let me hide you, then? We can warn Desari if you think it will help, but don’t go back there. Stay away from them,” Cullen begged her.
“Why are you doing this?” Tempest asked. “If you’re telling me the truth, your people will never forgive you for this. Why would you risk your life for me?”
Cullen stared sightlessly at the food on his place. “A long time ago I was engaged to the most wonderful woman on this earth. She was loving and gentle—there was no one quite like her. We were in San Francisco, doing the tourist thing together. She was murdered.”
Tempest felt his sorrow like a knife. “I’m so sorry, Mr. Tucker.” Tears swam in her eyes, tangling in her long lashes. “How horrible for you.”
“The police thought the murderer was a serial killer who had been terrorizing the city, but I saw it happen. The creature sank his teeth into her neck and drained her of blood. Then he threw her body down like it was so much garbage. Her blood stained his teeth and chin. He looked right at me and laughed. I knew he was going to kill me next.”
“But he didn’t.” She touched his hand, wanting to comfort him.
Cullen shook his head. When he looked at her, his eyes reflected a deep, piercing pain. “For so long I wished he had. But something or someone scared him off before he could. A light, like a comet, came streaking through the sky toward us. The vampire hissed and turned his head toward it. It was like watching a repulsive reptile move, that slow, undulating way snakes have. Then he literally dissolved in front of my eyes and streamed away from the light coming at us. I watched it chase him across the sky toward the ocean. He was the coldest, crudest thing I’d ever seen. I wanted revenge. I wanted to hunt him down, hunt down anything that even resembled him.”
“I can understand that,” Tempest murmured gently.
Cullen shook his head. “No, you can’t, and that’s the point. You remind me of her. She had great compassion, the way you seem to have. She’d never seek revenge; she’d try to find a way to forgive him. I think that’s what you would do.” He sighed and moved the food around on his plate. “They’re going to torture you for information. Even when you give it to them, they’ll kill you. God, Tempest, don’t you see? I can’t live with that.”
Tempest shook her head. “Darius won’t let them take me.”
Cullen’s eyebrows shot up. “Darius? He must be the bodyguard. I’ll admit the man is good, but it won’t matter how good he is. They’ll get you. They’ll find you and kidnap you. You don’t understand—these people are dead serious.”
She leaned forward to stare directly into his eyes so that he would know she spoke the absolute truth. “No, Cullen, you’re the one who doesn’t understand. They don’t understand. Darius would come for me. No one could stop him. Nothing on this earth could stop him. He is utterly relentless. He’s merciless. He’s as silent as the leopard and moves like the wind. They wouldn’t see him, wouldn’t smell him, as he sped through time or space. And he would never stop, not until he had me back and had removed any threat to me for all time. That is who they’d be dealing with.”
Cullen sat back as if she had struck him. His face paled visibly. “He’s not human? You’re saying this bodyguard is a vampire?”
“Mr. Tucker, you have vampires on the brain. Of course Darius isn’t a vampire. Do I look like the kind of woman who’d go out with a vampire?”
“The bodyguard is your boyfriend?” Cullen asked, incredulous. “He—” He forced himself to stop abruptly. “Are you sure you know what you’re doing? He sounds dangerous, Tempest. Very dangerous. I thought maybe he was involved with the singer.”
“He is. Darius is Desari’s older brother.” Tempest pushed at her hair, suddenly wondering what she must look like. She had been working all morning and hadn’t thought to clean up before coming into town. She was tired, too. She had stayed up all night with the band and Darius, and now the sun was getting to her. She even felt as if it were burning her eyes and skin. Sunburn wasn’t unusual for a fair-skinned redhead, but this burning was different. Deeper. She tried not to be alarmed. “The bodyguard is not invincible, Tempest,” Cullen said, “even if he does seem pretty amazing to both you and the vampire-hunting society.”
“I want to thank you for risking so much to warn us,” Tempest said softly, and she laid her hand gently on Cullen’s. “I’m terribly sorry for your loss, but please don’t worry about me. Darius will take care of all of us.”
Take your hand off that man now, Tempest!
Raw fury, black rage made the velvet voice menacing.
If you value his life, do as I say.
Tempest snatched her hand away from Cullen and ducked her head to hide the fire in her eyes. You have no right to
order me around. You have no idea what’s
going on
here, Darius. I know you are with a male. Well, gee, what a crime.
Sarcasm dripped from her voice.
“Tempest?” Cullen brought her attention back to him. “What’s wrong?” He couldn’t help but notice she had stiffened, her mouth tightening as if she were annoyed.
She shrugged. “Not much. I just have some weird organization of vampire-hunters wanting to kidnap, torture, and murder me. Not too big of a deal. I can handle it. Mostly I’m worried about Desari. She doesn’t deserve any more trauma.”
“I wish you’d listen to me. What if I come with you and talk to the bodyguard myself? If he’s as good as you say he is, he might be able to use the information I can give him,” Cullen ventured, not certain why he offered. He knew he would follow Tempest, try to protect her as best he could. Even if he didn’t actually go to the camp, he would try to guard her against others coming after her.
Tempest was already shaking her head.
Bring him back with you,
came Darius’s order.
I won’t do it, Darius. I have no idea what you’ll do to him. This man has suffered enough. You should trust your lifemate. I would if I had one,
she sniped back.
All I have is some bossy male who thinks he can order me around. Go back to sleep. You are very brave when you think I cannot touch you, honey.
All anger was gone from his voice, replaced by amusement. She felt the brush of his fingers around her throat. His touch sent the familiar wave of heat curling through her bloodstream and butterflies fluttering in her stomach. No one else could do that, touch her physically without being present. She knew Darius was far away; she felt the distance between them.
“Tempest?” Cullen was afraid he was losing her. She kept turning inward, focusing on something other than the danger she was in.
Tempest tilted her chin. “Why would you want to put yourself in more danger, Mr. Tucker? Aren’t you taking an even greater risk by joining us? Your people might not find out that you warned me today, but if you actually came to the camp, they’ll think you’ve changed sides.”
“I know,” Cullen admitted, suddenly weary. “I feel I owe the singer something. I didn’t know they’d ordered a hit on her until it was too late, but I was a part of that wacko group for a time, and I feel guilty.” His eyes jumped to the window, the door, continually checking in case Brady Grand had sent someone after him.
“Guilt isn’t a very good reason to put your life on the line,” Tempest pointed out.
Quit arguing with the man and bring him back. I don’t want him hurt. If he is telling the truth, no one will harm him,
Darius assured her.
“I can’t let these people kill you, Tempest,” Cullen argued. “Matt Brodrick had your picture in his camera when he died tracking your band. They know what you look like, and they’ll come for you.” Cullen Tucker paused. “How did he die, anyway? It appeared he shot himself, but weren’t you there?” Cullen tapped the picture one more time. “This is the exact same spot where his body was found.”
“I have no idea. I had no idea he was even taking my picture. He must have been hiding in the bushes close by. It’s a heavily wooded area.” Tempest tried to throw Cullen off track with the improvised explanation.
“It doesn’t stand to reason, Tempest,” Cullen said quietly, “that Matt would take your picture and then blow himself away. The police bought it because there was absolutely no evidence of anyone else being around, but I knew Matt. He was a sadistic son-of-a-bitch. He never would have killed himself.”
For a moment she couldn’t breathe, remembering the way the reporter had looked at her with his cold, calculating eyes.
I am here, baby,
Darius reassured her.
This man asks many questions, but I do not sense a trap.
She took a deep breath and began telling Cullen Tucker the truth. “I didn’t see him kill himself. He was going to shoot me, but I fell backward off a cliff and down a ravine. I heard a gunshot, but I have no idea what actually happened.”
“No one else was there?” Cullen prompted.
“I didn’t see anyone,” Tempest reiterated truthfully.
Cullen sighed softly. “Let’s get out of here. The longer we stick around, the more likely it is we’ll be spotted. Why did you have to drive such a distinctive car?”
“You’re right,” she agreed. “No one would have noticed the touring bus with the huge block lettering on the sides.”
He grinned at her, and Tempest realized it was the first time she had seen the man smile. “I bet you give the bodyguard more trouble than the entire band put together, don’t you?” he teased.
She tilted her chin, ignoring Darius’s silent laughter. “Why in the world would you say that?”
“Because I know the bodyguard type. And this one is clearly powerful, maybe even deadly. I’d say he’d be dominant, aggressive, and the extremely jealous, possessive type if he ever fell for a woman.”
“What an interesting assessment.”
Take that, Darius,
she added happily.
He hasn’t even met you yet, and he
knows
exactly what you’re like. Rather interesting description, don’t you think? What I think is, you had better bring your lovely little butt home fast, honey, or I might be tempted to spank it. You’re welcome to try,
she said haughtily, knowing she was perfectly safe.
Cullen Tucker stood up, tossed some money onto the table, then held her chair. She sighed. Her nice, solitary existence used to be so simple, so quiet. She heard Darius’s low growl of aggression when Cullen guided her toward the door with his palm at her back, and she sighed again. The words echoing in her mind were in another language, one she was unfamiliar with, but the blistering tone told her Darius was swearing.
Step away from him. He has no business putting his hands on you. He’s simply being polite.
Cullen yelped, removing his hand from her to bring it to his mouth. “Something stung me.”
“Really? I didn’t see a bee.” Tempest looked as sympathetic as she could under the circumstances, but she felt an unexpected urge to laugh.
Spoiled little king of the castle. Learn same respect, honey,
Darius ordered.
Cullen opened the car door for her, then yelped a second time when he held her elbow to help her in. He frowned at her. “What the hell’s going on?”
Tempest was fumbling for dark glasses. The sun seemed to be sending shards of glass into her eyes. Almost at once they were swollen and red, streaming in response to the burning light. “I can’t think what you mean,” she told Cullen.
She drove back to the campsite at a much more sedate pace than she had used heading for the town. Aware that Cullen was following her, she took care to keep to the speed limit, annoying though it was. The road was made for the sports car-winding, narrow, climbing upward, sheer drop-offs on one side, the mountain rising on the other. She had to fight the inclination to let loose and enjoy what the car could really do.
Once in the forest itself, she moved through the network of dirt roads like a professional. Cullen needn’t know she had practiced driving the route so she wouldn’t get lost. She maneuvered through the maze of narrow tracks, selecting one bearing to the right. At once she felt a curious, mood-wrenching sensation, the dark oppression of entering a time warp of evil-the perimeters Darius had set around the camp to keep others out. She was more sensitive to them than she had been before. It wasn’t so bad that she couldn’t drive through the barricade, but she feared Cullen might have a problem.
He pulled up behind her, not quite to the barricade. “What’s the hold-up?” he called.
She pulled her car forward, waiting for him to see what would happen. Cullen drove toward her a few feet, then stopped abruptly, slamming on the breaks. Tempest glanced in her rearview mirror and noted that he was trembling, beads of perspiration dotting his forehead. Can
he make it through the safeguards? Does it get worse? For a mile or so. He can take it. Can you get rid of it? Lead him through it.
Darius was implacable. He would not lower the barrier when he knew they were hunted, when he was aware Tempest could be in imminent danger.
Muttering about stubborn men, Tempest got out of the sports car and walked back to Cullen. His breathing was labored, his hand clutching at his chest.
“I think I’m having a heart attack,” he managed to get out.
“Move over,” she said. “I’ll drive. It’s just a kind of security measure Darius dreamed up. He’s a genius, you know,” she said briskly. “It drives people away from the area.”
“It feels evil, like something is waiting to drag us into hell,” Cullen said, but he obediently moved over.
“Yeah, well, after you meet Darius, you might think that’s just what happened,” she replied grimly. “God help you, Cullen, if you’re not on the up and up. Darius is no one you want to try to lie to.”
“If he designed this particular security system,” Cullen said with a certain degree of admiration and awe, “I believe you.”
“Is it letting up?” she asked hopefully. She didn’t want to leave the sports car where someone might find it and give away their location, and it was too hot to drive him to camp and walk back to retrieve the car.
“Enough that I know I’m not having a heart attack. I can follow you. Just get us out of this as fast as you can,” he pleaded.
Tempest patted his shoulder and slid out of his vehicle and back into hers. They made good time weaving in and out of the trails, Cullen practically tailgating her.
The camp appeared deserted when they arrived. Tempest knew the band and Darius were sleeping somewhere in safety. The cats, scenting a stranger, immediately started roaring their opposition to such an invasion. Cullen refused to get out of his car, hearing what sounded like a den of leopards, hungry and determined to have him for lunch. Tempest spent a few minutes silencing the cats, exasperated that Darius had chosen that moment to bow out and leave her on her own.
“Where is everyone?” Cullen demanded, finally emerging from his car and gingerly looking around the deserted camp. He followed Tempest to the truck.
“Darius is somewhere in the woods. He likes to string a hammock between two trees far away from all of us and have what he affectionately refers to as his quiet time.”
Very funny, honey. You are the worst liar I have ever met. And stop touching that man. If I get any more jealous, I will be the one to have the heart attack. Go back to sleep. You’re annoying me,
Tempest said severely. She smiled sweetly at Cullen. “He’s so moody, you know.”
“And Desari? Where is she?” He glanced uneasily at the motor home.
Tempest caught his look and burst out laughing. “She’s in a coffin in the bus. Would you like to see? I can let the cats out while you take a look around.”
Cullen looked sheepish. “I guess I am being pretty silly. But those cats are another reason Desari was marked by the society.” He absently handed Tempest a tool she pointed at. “Vampires supposedly have some animal from hell looking after them in the daytime. Those cats fit the description.”
Tempest laughed with him. “Actually, the bus is empty except for the cats. I use it more than the others. They’re up a great deal at night, either rehearsing or performing or driving to their next destination. I take care of the vehicles, so I go to town and do the shopping and take care of business. Desari and Julian are probably up already,” she improvised. “They like to hike. Personally, I think that’s their excuse to make eyes at each other with no one around.”
“Julian Savage? He’s high on the society’s hit list. He has quite a reputation. Some of them think he’s the reason Desari escaped the hit,” Cullen confessed.
Tempest banged her knuckles, muttered a few choice words, and bent back to her task. “The way I heard it, he did save her life.”
“Did he kill the entire squad?” Cullen asked, curious.
“I don’t know. I never even knew they were dead. I rarely read the newspapers.” She said it almost absently, as if she were barely listening.
“I don’t think it was Julian,” Cullen said carefully, watching her closely. “I think the bodyguard killed them.”
She not only banged her knuckles this time but her forehead as well. She turned to glare at him. “I have work to do. Get out of my hair for a while, will you? Go check the woods for the band. Dayan has one of those little tent things. Don’t wake him up if he’s sleeping, though; he’s a grouch if you disturb him before he gets his eight hours. Syndil could be in the bus with the cats if you want to look,” she offered, knowing full well he wouldn’t take her up on it.
Cullen shook his head. “That won’t be necessary. I don’t want to get anyone riled up. I’ll just look things over to see if I can figure a way to tighten security around here.”
“Oh, yeah, that’s all we need, one more bossy male telling us what to do,” Tempest muttered under her breath.
I am impressed with your ability to give the illusion we are all out roaming in the sun. See? I’m an accomplished liar when I need to be,
she said.
Guess it comes with living the kind of life I had when I was a kid. It might come in handy if these maniacs get their hands on me.
Darius could hear the faint echo of fear in her voice. She was trying valiantly to pretend the things Cullen had revealed to her didn’t frighten her, but he was dwelling in her mind, and he knew she was afraid.
Torture and kill.
Those were the words Cullen Tucker had used, and Tempest had a vivid imagination.
You are under my protection,
he reassured her gently.
Tempest smiled at his arrogance. She knew that his comment was supposed to make her feel instantly better, but she was used to relying on herself, not on the protection of some man.
Some man?
Darius echoed.
She could hear his soft laughter, the gentle teasing that always managed to melt her heart.
I’m trying to work here, Darius. Go away. You really do have trouble with authority figures. And you have trouble with anyone saying no to you, don’t you?
she countered and promptly banged her knuckles again.
Damn it, Darius, you’re distracting me. See what you made me do? Pay attention to your work, and stop looking at that male. I’m not looking at him,
she denied hotly, glancing up to see just where Cullen was. She didn’t want him snooping around the bus and being eaten by the two leopards, may be even at Darius’s command.
Soft, mocking laughter echoed in her head.
There you go, looking again. Pay attention to what you are doing or we might have to fire you. Desari wouldn’t let you. Go back to sleep while the sun is still up.