Whispers In Silence: Part 5
Chapter 14
The turkey wasn’t the only thing that could be cut with
a knife. Adrian had been on edge since
he woke up, and the tension replacing the dining room’s air supply didn’t help. If he didn’t see the drama and he couldn’t
hear it…that had to be better, right. He
picked at the food on his plate, trying to remember what course this was and
how many courses they had yet to go.
The only thing that kept him from taking Wes’s hand
and getting the hell out of Dodge was the sullen woman seated across from
him. At first Tina had been teeming with
excitement, proud of her handmade menus and name cards at each plate. She’d
brought them all drinks and offered up a smile that secretly warmed Adrian
inside.
She was the perfect hostess.
All of that changed about forty minutes into
dinner. It took Adrian some time to
notice her emotional shift and the quiet that overcame the other diners, but
when he did, Adrian didn’t like it. Tina
focused on her plate. Her shoulders
slumped and lips pressed into a delicate frown.
Of course it was all because of Sutton.
The fact he’d had enough alcohol to service happy hour and hadn’t once
complimented his beautiful mate on the meal she’d slave over had taken its
toll.
Not one to make himself the center of attention,
Adrian still had to do something. Sitting
by to watch this train wreck intensify wasn’t going to help anyone, especially
poor Tina. Adrian took another bite of
sinful cranberry sauce and put his fork down.
“This is really good, Tina.”
Sutton’s mate looked at Adrian straightaway. Her bottom lip quivered and her eyes misted
over. She blinked rapidly to keep the
tears at bay and smiled for his benefit, although it was a tight, forced smile
that spoke of her unfailing manners.
“Thank you.”
Sutton set down his drink to observe his mate, as if
he were only now detecting her state of distress. He put a hand to Tina’s shoulder, waiting for
her to look at him, but she refused. For
all the warning Adrian had been imparted from Wes not to upset Sutton’s mate,
it had been Sutton to break his own rule.
The stricken expression that crossed Sutton’s face was enough to bring
any evil dictator to his knees. He looked like a sad puppy who had been thrown
out into the cold.
The Captain pushed his drink away and turned to his
mate. “Vertina?”
“It’s fine,” she snapped while punching the prongs
of her fork through a cranberry.
“It is most certainly not fine.”
Tina glared at her mate. “You’re right. It isn’t.
What good will it do to tell you that, though. You can’t tell yourself what’s wrong, let
alone your mate. And now you’ve seen for
yourself how you’ve humiliated me, and ruined this meal and any chance we had
for Adrian to come back. That is
punishment enough, I would think.” Tina
took another bite, staring at her plate as if it was the most important thing
in the world. To her, with all she had
done for this meal, it probably was.
“I am so sorry, my mate.” Sutton took her hand, prying the fork from
her rigid fingers. “Forgive me for my
rudeness.”
“What is wrong with you?” She snatched her hand away. “I may have been raised to cook and clean and
run a household for my husband, but I did not sign up for this. Sometimes you
are a mess I can’t clean away, Sutton Donohue.”
Adrian wasn’t a vampire yet but it didn’t take much
to feel Tina’s rage. He guessed if he were in her shoes, having
prepared this meal and her home for over a week to make her family proud, only
to get nothing but a fight in return… He would be angry too. She’d wanted Adrian to feel comfortable, to
experience a memorable family gathering that would make him anxious to repeat,
and now Tina was terrified he would never come back.
Had she, like Sutton, been waiting for him to come
home all this time? Yes. She had.
Adrian didn’t know how to react.
His body said he was to be emotional and thankful and maybe even hug
this woman he’d possibly met when he was very little. But his brain was at war; training versus
human emotion. One thing was very clear
by the way Tina was looking at Adrian. This
woman thought of Adrian as her family.
Adrian eyed Quinton, trying to get his take on
this. His cousin’s eyes widened
urgently, and he motioned with his chin at his mother. Do
something about this, Quinton’s expression said.
Adrian squinted back. You do
something about this! You’re her son.
Quinton shook his head. He lifted a brow. You
think I have anything to do with this?
Nope. Quinton stared right
back. She wants you.
The body language across the table escalated to the
point where Adrian was sure his aunt was going to tear Sutton’s head off. He had to act quickly because Quinton wasn’t
going to be of any help. Not that
Quinton was an asshole who didn’t care.
Quinton was simply right.
Adrian stood up and slipped out of the room,
ignoring Wes, who reached out to stop him.
Best friends until the end, even when they were at odds, Wes still couldn’t
step in between Sutton and his mate. He
closed his mouth and gave up as Adrian escaped.
No idea of the layout of the house, Adrian smelled the
kitchen as he walked back through the den and into the main hallway. Homemade
bread, soup, and spiced apples made his mouth water. This was a much better detour, as he had no
intention of walking past Tina and Sutton and possibly getting mauled. So he took the back route to the kitchen and
found the maid with her heart over her chest.
She turned to him in shock, at a loss as how to help her beloved
mistress.
“Uh…” Adrian cleared his throat. He waved her over. The maid was hesitant but she complied. “Is there any way you could set up coffee or
tea in the main room? I don’t know what
they drink but we’re going to need a little privacy to work this out.”
She gratefully grabbed his arm. “Thank you. Oh thank you.”
“Sure…”
Adrian rubbed his arm where the maid had left bruises of appreciation. The maid caught him eyeing the apple pastries
and stuffed one into his hand. She
nodded once, as if her pastries were the key to life itself, making them
valuable for trade in an emergency. She tightened her apron with calloused
fingers, put a silver tea tray on the counter and took a deep breath.
She was ready.
Adrian hid his smile from her. He bit into the pastry, scarfing it down in
four bites. And while the maid prepared
ammunition for the dining room war refugees, Adrian scattered back to the
dining room with traces of cinnamon and sugar on his lips. He could get used to this family thing. If there were pastries involved, he could get
used to anything.
Tina was standing, working an accusing finger into
Sutton’s chest when he returned. She
noticed Adrian near the door and put a hand to her mouth. From enraged to blubbering in five seconds
flat. She thought Adrian was leaving.
“Okay… Quinton. You two,” he pointed to the Guards
he didn’t know, “there’s coffee or something in the main room.”
The Guards didn’t doddle. Talk about awkward—going
to your boss’s house for a holiday meal to watch all his dirty laundry be
unveiled. Quinton was another story;
he’d seen the good, the bad, and the ugly and was comfortable with all of
it. He took a casual exit, making sure
to check his mother over and give his father a warning look on his way
out. When only the four of them
remained, Adrian shut the doors to the kitchen and the den and then sat next to
Wes.
“Could you two take a seat, please,” Adrian
said. Wes squeezed his knee. This was going to be okay. He was doing the right thing, even if he had
no idea what he was doing at all.
Sutton tried to pull the chair out for his mate but
was pushed away. Tina scooted back into
the table and crossed her arms as Sutton sat next to her. She was not backing down, which left Sutton
helpless as how to fix this.
“Aunt Tina,” Adrian tried; the words foreign on his
tongue. “I’m sorry for causing you this
much stress. You didn’t have to go out
of your way to make dinner over the top, but it was wonderful all the same.” Adrian looked at Sutton before Tina burst
into another round of waterworks. “I
know I’m supposed to be your employee but I do know that work is work and
personal is personal.”
“That’s rich coming from a Hunter,” Sutton said,
hands signing simultaneously.
“Everything is personal with you.”
Adrian fisted his hands under the table. Sutton’s dig at his past hurt, especially
when this was the man who supposedly wanted more than a work relationship. Still,
while Adrian was programmed to lash out and get results, he drew on Wes and what
he would do in this situation to form a response. Wes didn’t let Sutton’s digs get to him. Like Adrian, he saw Sutton’s remarks as a
defense mechanism—to take the attention off himself.
“You’re intoxicated and you’re angry right now.”
Facts. Adrian used them to his
advantage, to keep calm. “You knew how
much Aunt Tina had done to make this dinner special and yet you drank more than
you should have. I rarely drink to
handle my stress.”
“Talk to me in another hundred years, Adrian,”
Sutton bit back.
“I hope that in another hundred years, we are still
talking. I thought that was your goal,
to establish a relationship between us.
Yet you have done nothing but make things hard on me from the
beginning. You gave me a partner you
thought appropriate, and he is.” Adrian didn’t look at Wes. He’d lose his nerve. “But ever since I’ve arrived you’ve been
butting heads because I…I am more receptive to Wes’s techniques than yours. I am not a contest, Uncle. There is no prize. And you are so wrapped up in this case that
you have ignored your long friendship with Wes, your mate, and what’s really
important today.
“Do you really believe I wasn’t nervous to come
here? Do you think I don’t understand
what this dinner was to this family? I
do. I’m trying very hard to please
everyone because I want to stay. I
really do,” Adrian whispered. He rubbed
his neck where his skin was hot to the touch.
“And even if you continue to be jealous of my relationship with my
partner, or find me unstable because of past, or think I’ll amount to nothing
just like my father, we are still blood.”
“Blood that will be spilt because I don’t know how
to save you!” Sutton slammed his fist
down on the table. His dark eyes
glittered as he stared at Adrian. “Just
like I was unable to help David…”
Tina’s eyes registered shock and understanding. She unfurled her mate’s clenched fingers and
threaded hers through his. “Talk to me.”
Sutton shook his head.
“Sutton, please.
Forget the meal. This has nothing
to do with the meal. Why are you so
angry?” Tina pressed her body against
her mate’s. “It’s this case, isn’t
it? What happened to Briggs was a
tragedy, Sutton, but his death cannot rule your life.”
Sutton whipped around to face her. “How do you know about that?”
“I know when you’re keeping things from me, so I had
Quinton call in a few favors.” She put a
finger over his mouth before he could start to argue. “No one gave away details. Quinton was told that if he had information
about Briggs’s passing to call Detective Feist or Captain Donohue. That the investigation was ongoing and they
had no new information. I put the rest
of the pieces together myself.”
Sutton sank in his seat until he could lay his head
on Tina’s shoulder. He sighed. “We have nothing to go on. Two ex-Hunters, a dead man, and an entire
fleet of experienced Guards and we can’t find one single clue to lead us to our
murderer. We have no way of knowing when
he’ll try to take Adrian.”
“Take Adrian?!” Tina gasped.
“Keep your voice down.” Sutton hugged his mate close. “If you promise not to breathe another word
about this case at dinner, then I will tell you everything later. Deal?
Just know I can’t do anything and it’s killing me.” Sutton squeezed her hand. “I can’t lose another one, my mate. I simply cannot.”
“I know.”
Tina kissed his hand. “I know.”
When Adrian was nine years old, he remembered his
Uncle coming for a visit. Adrian and
Davide were stationed in a small German town, keeping a close eye on a forming
coven. Sutton had come in from the cold and
not looked at Adrian. He didn’t smile or
call his nephew over. He didn’t bring a
gift or tell a stupid joke. He sat in
front of the fire with Davide for hours, sobbing into his brother’s shoulder.
Because Sutton’s eldest son had died, a part of
Adrian’s Uncle had died with him. And when Davide had died not five years
later, his passing messed Sutton Donohue up something fierce.
Sutton could not handle another death close to his
heart, which meant Sutton was very fond of Adrian despite his earlier
actions. Sutton was nervous, more so
terrified he couldn’t protect the child he had always wanted to protect. Although Adrian could handle his own, he
respected Sutton’s fatherly needs. He’d
once had a father who would’ve done anything to keep him safe—even if keeping
Adrian safe meant molding him into the perfect weapon.
“I understand what you want. I’ve understood for a long time how much you
wanted to protect me. But I chose to be
a Hunter. I chose to make enemies and I
chose to deal with those consequences.
It is not your fault.” Adrian
leaned forward. “The way I am is not
your fault.”
“There is nothing wrong with the way you are. Our family comes from a long line of Hunters,
and I understand how you think and act perfectly.” Sutton looked down, guiltily observing his
free hand.
“What?”
Adrian didn’t comprehend. He and
his father had been Hunters. His mother
too. As far as Adrian knew, the line
ended there.
Tina rolled her eyes at her mate. “I swear, Sutton…” She turned to Adrian. “Before your father met your mother, Sutton
and Davide Hunted together. Just like
you, their father taught them too.”
Back
then, there were times when we had nowhere to go and no one to turn to. We couldn’t be seen and couldn’t trust anyone. Adrian slowly turned to
Wes. His partner had tried to tell him
before he fed from Adrian last night.
Adrian thought Wes had been joking, twisting his words back at him. “You were Hunters?”
Wes put his hands up. “Not me,
and before you get angry, I was just along for the ride. A very long, exciting ride that upped my
street credentials.”
Adrian looked from Wes to Sutton. “Why hide this from me?”
“Do you believe it should be public knowledge, a
high ranking official’s past made available for the world?” Sutton tried and failed. Adrian wasn’t buying it and Sutton knew it. “Fine.
I left your father out there on his own.
Nina separated us because I couldn’t do my job when all I did was worry
for my brother’s safety. I was a liability to him.”
“You thought I’d think of less of you for getting
out?”
“Yes.”
Adrian sneered.
“Did it occur to you why I kept Hunting instead of going back with
you? Every time you visited, I wanted to
go… I couldn’t. You know why?”
“No.”
“I had to protect him from himself, just as you
wanted to.” Adrian straightened in his
chair. He kept any emotion from his
face. “If that made me someone’s enemy,
then so be it. Let them come for
me. But I do not regret my decision to
stay by his side and give up my childhood to learn everything he knew. And I consider this meal, being here now with
your family and remembering my own, to be the best of both worlds.”
Sutton offered Adrian his hand over the table. He paused, searching Adrian’s face for
honesty. “You don’t think less of me for
making another life for myself, for leaving your father, for leaving you?”
“Not at all.”
Adrian shook on it. “Stop
worrying so much. This guy will slip up
and we’ll be right there when he does.
I’m not an easy target, Sutton.
And I have a good partner to watch my back. If I understand correctly, he was there for
you too at one time.”
Sutton glanced at Wes. He didn’t want to admit it, but he had no
choice. Adrian had won this battle. “I apologize, Wesley. I don’t know what came over me but I was
wrong to use my authority against you.
You did what any good friend would do and held me accountable.”
Wes grunted.
He rubbed his hands on his knees.
“It’s fine.”
“Wesley?”
“We’re good, Sutt.
Really.”
Sutton released Adrian’s hand and sat back in his
seat. He tugged on his jacket and
allowed himself to smile. “You remind me
so much of Davide it will be like old times catching this bastard. I look forward to closing this case with all
of your help.”
Adrian narrowed his eyes at Wes. “Speaking of old times, why don’t we start at
the beginning. I’d love to hear how you
got involved.”
“Tell
A-D-R-I-A-N how I became your Knight in Shining Armor.” Sutton grinned. He put an arm around his mate and tucked her
in close to his chest. Tina’s smile said
everything. More than a perfect turkey,
this was what she’d wanted all along.
And like nothing had ever happened, the tension took
a swift exit and everyone breathed easily.
Wes stuck up his middle finger. “You broke my leg carrying me through the
basement door. I don’t exactly call that
shining anything.”
Adrian rested his chin on his fist, losing himself
in their quick hand gestures, stories from long ago, and Wes’s silent laughter.
Chapter 15
Two weeks after Thanksgiving and they were nowhere
closer to finding Briggs’s killer.
Briggs hadn’t contacted Adrian, not even in a dream—not that Adrian had
ever experienced spirit communication while asleep. But it was worth a shot, a chance the Bureau
and Sutton were willing to take. The
Captain had ordered the coroner in France to send a lock of Briggs’s hair and
the instructor’s rosary he kept next to his bed to Adrian; one physical key to
Briggs, and the other sentimental. The
day the package arrived at the house, Briggs had been cremated and readied for
his remaining family members to do as they wished.
Ever since then, Adrian kept the two keepsakes close
to him, especially when he slept. What
little he did sleep. Still, he got nothing from the dead. Not a peep.
No one was getting any rest the further the case was drawn out, but it
was nice to think that maybe Briggs had given into eternal slumber and had
found some peace.
Although, in the back of Wes’s mind, he knew Briggs
wouldn’t go without the last word.
Wasn’t his style. He didn’t just
give up. That’s what made this case all
the more curious. If Briggs had reached
out in warning to Adrian, fighting against the afterlife to protect his pupil,
and Adrian was now receptive to him, then why didn’t Briggs come out with it?
Wes flipped to the next screenshot of the video from
graduation night. Every entrance, every
camera, every face and profile, back and front had been broken up into stills
for Wes to memorize. This practice wasn’t uncommon to him; he was always given
video and photographic evidence because of his talented memory. But this case
was different, more at stake this time. Hours
and hours he searched their faces, their shadows, their enhanced images to find
something out of place, and still…nothing.
Everyone was accounted for, signed in and matched to their image. Every Guard and student was where they were
supposed to be.
Wes put his hand over the touch screen monitor and
stopped. His finger lingered above
Briggs, their Instructor paused mid-wave to Nina’s German ambassador, Patel
something or other. Briggs’s last smile,
his last wave, and no one to answer for his last anything.
“Who took you from us?” Wes whispered to the empty
Cage.
Ready to move on before he started driving himself
mad, Wes flinched when the bulbs buzzed loudly, cutting through silence. Wes had been alone for hours, hadn’t had a decent
cup of coffee yet, and was at work well before anyone else was due to show.
He couldn’t sleep.
Let Feist and Maloy into the house because the temperature outside had
dropped unseasonably low, and he wanted someone watching Adrian while he was
away. Then called Davis to drive him to
the Bureau, claiming he needed an early workout.
Davis didn’t like being lied to, but he
understood. He left Wes to do his thing
while he went to get some breakfast and then work out. Now Wes wasn’t sure he’d made the right decision
coming down here alone. His eyes hurt
from staring too hard. His skin crawled
with a strange, prickly sensation. And
now he was spooked over a buzzing light bulb.
“Coffee,” Wes declared to no one. He cracked his back, twisting both ways, and
the lights above hummed and then blinked.
Blinked in a way only dying lights would. “I am not about to be down here when that
shit happens.”
His phone in hand, he texted Davis about the lights,
hoping maintenance was lurking about at this hour. Then it happened again, for longer this
time. It was dark for almost ten
seconds, and when the lights zapped back on air rushed from Wes’s lungs into
the Cage.
He would never like basements, but he dealt with
them. A pitch black basement hit too
close to home. Add some mud to the
floor, water leaking from the ceiling, and handcuff his wrists to the wall and
he was back to a place he did not wish to go.
“Fuck this.”
Wes pushed his arms through his coat sleeves. A strange creaking noise behind him chilled
his blood. Slowly, Wes turned back to
the monitor. The set up was attached to
a movable arm and anyone could move the screen wherever the audience needed it. Horrified, Wes watched the monitor swivel on
its own to him and then stop.
“Wake up, Wes.”
The Detective pinched the top of his hand. “Wake the fuck up.”
Wes’s focus was drawn to Briggs’s image on the
screen; an image that zoomed in all on its own. There was a darkened alcove
behind the instructor where a potted tree was housed just outside the entrance
to the main hallway. It was a mere
sliver of dark behind Briggs that could fit a very slender person at best.
The stilled image rippled, that shadow behind the
tree warping until Wes could make out a hand and a profile that would have
looked like the continuation of leaves if he wasn’t seeing this now. There had been a person standing behind
Briggs the entire time. Why Wes was
seeing this and not Adrian was scary.
However scary, this was a clue.
This was their killer, this simple profile hiding in the dark.
“Who is he?”
Wes shouted to the Cage and the space beyond. “Briggs!
Briggs…” he repeated, softer this time.
The lights returned to normal. Wes glanced up. His heart raced and he found himself putting
his fingers to his wrist to calm down before he his heart jumped out of his
chest. Something Adrian seemed to take
comfort in much like Wes took comfort in Adrian’s presence these days. Except now their roles were reversed, the
universe knocked on end and Wes left to deal with what had occurred. As he looked back at the monitor, it too had
returned to normal; Briggs just another face in the crowd that Wes recognized.
Wes dialed Davis because he was certain he was going
into shock. His entire body trembled. He listened to his own heavy breathing as he
waited for Davis to answer.
An out of breath Davis picked up, “Yeah?”
Wes didn’t know what to say. He exhaled into the phone, scared to even
move.
“Man, you okay?
Wes?”
“Davis... Please…”
Wes listened to the squeak of shoes across polished
cement flooring, and Davis slamming through the double doors as he ran. “Stay there.
I’m on my way.”
Wes sat in his chair, still unable to face the
darkness behind him. He continued to
hold his phone to his ear, scared that if Davis wasn’t there to listen, Wes’s
link to reality would be gone forever.
On the other end, Davis pounded down several flights of stairs. He beeped
through security check-ins, and practically raced through Evidence to get to
the Cage. He bent over, hands on his
knees while he dragged in air once he got to the platform.
“You… You’re not bleeding…” Davis stood.
“Scared me. You sounded…”
“Like I saw a ghost,” Wes murmured.
Davis pulled a face and clucked his tongue. “This some joke? Man, I thought you were dying the way you
sounded. All whispery and shit.” Davis
walked closer and frowned. “Speaking of,
you look like shit. I know you’re white,
but you’re whiter than normal.”
“I don’t feel so good.”
Davis sobered instantly. “We don’t get sick.”
“I think I’m gonna throw up now.”
“The fuck?”
Davis grabbed a trash bin with shredded paper in it and pushed it over
just in time. He pulled out his phone
and groaned at Wes’s huddled form over the trash bin. “I’m calling Sutton and then the clinic. You even smell funny, like…garbage or
something. And I’ve smelled puke. That isn’t puke.”
Wes wiped his mouth.
He glanced up at Davis. “I was
serious.”
“Yeah? So am I.
What’s wrong? I’d say you were drinking, but you can’t hide the smell of
booze from a vampire.”
“Briggs was here.”
“Man, quit with that shit. You’ve been hanging around Adrian too
much. Having dead people’s hair sent to
your house for some dream voodoo. Did
you fall asleep and have a nightmare or something?” Davis thought he was nuts.
“He was here.” Wes’s stomach settled long enough for him stand and adjust the monitor. “And that’s not garbage you smell."
Wes sniffed, noticing the stench too, a scent any Detective had come in contact with before. “That’s the smell of a dead body.”
Davis took a long drag of air. A few short sniffs and he stopped to gawk at
Wes. “You’re right but it’s not here. We would know. How the hell is this possible?”
“Because ghosts don’t have bodies, Davis. But this guy was here,” Wes whispered,
pointing to the potted tree behind Briggs on the monitor. “The whole time he was here. He’s coming.
That’s what Briggs said.”
“You’re scaring me, Durren. Tell me what happened.” Davis put a hand on Wes’s shoulder, the kind
of touch that was meant to soothe a child after a bad dream.
Wes pushed Davis’s hand away. He zoomed in on the tree and picked up a
stylus from the desk. “You unlocked
Adrian’s file and a signal was sent to someone who flagged it.”
“Old news, man.”
“Listen to me.
Even if the killer was able to get the notification immediately, he
would still have to plan his way into the Academy. He would be near the Academy since the signal
went off, or on his way there at the very least.”
“He had help, remember? We’re still working on finding the mole. He had to let Briggs’s killer in or at least give
him an access route to get to Briggs’s office.”
“What if the mole didn’t need to help him get in?”
“I’m not following.”
Davis sighed.
Wes began to outline a shadowy figure on the screen
with his stylus until the killer’s outline was a bright white. He looked up at Davis. “What if he simply walked in unnoticed?”
“Christ…”
Davis gripped the desk, practically nose to screen with the image. He, too, couldn’t believe what he was
seeing. “You telling me Briggs gave you
this information?”
“I’m not crazy.”
“Drugs?”
“No.”
“I believe you.
Scary as hell, but I believe you, man.”
Davis clapped him on the back.
“Timestamp on this still?”
Wes nodded.
He touched the bottom of the screen, where the stamp had been
hidden. “Quarter to nine. Guards logged each guest in on a tablet. There’s a timestamp on those too. Over there on the table.” Wes pointed to the guest list sheets they’d
been given copies of.
He continued to the next still, which could be split
down to half a second if he wished. A
man’s back now faced the camera, and he was approaching the next set of Guards
in the crowd. Another still showed the
man wearing a full tuxedo, but his head was bent to hide his face. He knew where the cameras were. He knew how to hide from them because he was
a professional.
Not professional enough to be invisible. A Guard checked him in, which meant his name
was on the list and they’d somehow overlooked him. In the next still, the Guard waved him
through, and the man with the shoulder length ponytail and fancy tuxedo entered
the main room to sip champagne, enjoy the ceremony, and then kill their beloved
instructor.
Wes checked the time gap. Less than thirty seconds was all it took for
their killer to make one of the easiest security breaches in history.
“Checkpoint three.
Timestamp is 8:46.” Wes checked
with Davis.
Davis scanned the sheet with his fingertip. He looked at Wes, disbelief widening his
eyes.
“What?”
“I swear this case cannot get any crazier. Ulysses Maloy’s plus one checked in at
8:46. We never saw it because Ulysses
never checked in. There’s a red
unregistered stamp next to his name.
That’s because he was too dead to attend.” Davis sat on the edge of the table. “Plus ones are in fine print underneath an
official guest. If they checked in, they
only get a small timestamp. This guy is
good, Wes. He had to have known Maloy
was dead, which meant he was in town days before graduation night, maybe even
before I triggered Adrian’s file.”
“He had to see his target up close,” Wes
confirmed. “This isn’t a hired hit,
Davis. This guy is playing a game,
leaving behind messages and body parts for Adrian to piece together.”
“I was wrong.
It just got crazier.” Davis set
the sign in sheets down. “Tell me what
you need me to do and I’ll do it.”
Wes clicked and clicked, typing in different cameras
to find the guy’s trail. But after their
killer turned into the main room he vanished.
“We need to call everyone in. I
want to know if this guy was with Ulysses at some point and if his nephew can
ID him with these stills. They may have
had some prior interaction back at home.
If he doesn’t know him, maybe Adrian will.”
***
“You saw Briggs?”
Adrian faced Wes, looking mortified.
“How is that possible?”
“I
didn’t see him. He was here, though, I
felt him Adrian.”
Adrian shook his head. “No. You
were studying that image for hours to find what we needed. Purely an instinct from being in the field. You don’t know what a spirit is like. You have no idea.” Visibly angry, Adrian refused to believe the
truth.
“A-D-R-I-A-N,
I was terrified. I still am.” Wes attempted to convey how serious he
was. He put a hand over his chest. “I asked him who killed you and he showed me. I don’t know what else to say to make you
believe me.”
Adrian crossed his arms and stared hard at the
ground. He shook his head over and over. “How
can you suddenly develop my ability?
It’s not possible.”
“We should have you checked out at the clinic,
Wesley. I’ll phone in a favor from
Nina. I’m sure the Royal Doctor will be
discrete. Surely you’re exhausted and
its caused you to hallucinate.” Sutton
came to Wes’s side.
“I’m not crazy.
I’m not having a breakdown. I
know what I saw. I know what I smelled, because
Davis smelled it too. And Briggs was
here, in this room with me. Stop fussing
over me and let me do my job.”
“Wesley, how am I supposed to feel about this? You believe you now have the ability to
communicate with the dead, and are crediting your discovery to Briggs. A dead man, Durren—you were shown the way by
a dead man. I would be the crazy one not
to see to your health and welfare at this point. No offense, Adrian.”
Adrian lifted one shoulder. He could’ve cared less what Sutton had to
say.
Sutton was right to put his hands back in his
pockets and not touch Wes’s forearm like he wanted to. “And even though you’ve spent a lot of time
with Adrian, it would be unprecedented for a vampire to gain abilities from
anyone, with the exception of the Guardian bloodline. Memories and feelings from a donor are
plausible. Warnings and communications
from a mate are normal. But abilities,
Wesley… Absolutely not. For this
miraculous gift to be remotely logical you and Adrian would have had to partake
in some sort of…”
Adrian looked away quickly. Wes looked down at the ground.
Sutton raised a brow. He put a finger to Adrian’s chin, begging his
attention. “Some sort of fluid
exchange.” Every Detective paused in a
collective hush. All eyes fell on Adrian
and Wes. “Wesley?”
Wes closed his eyes.
There was no point in lying to Sutton, so Wesley admitted, “I fed from
him.”
“Might I ask how long this has been going on?” Sutton narrowed his eyes.
Wes snarled. “Does
it matter? Do I ask you how many times
you’ve fed from your mate?”
Who
the fuck does Sutton think he is? Don’t
you dare get up in my shit like that.
Adrian is my business, not yours.
If the room could’ve been zapped of sound, it would have. It was that quiet. Sutton looked between Wes and Adrian, who
were both frozen to the spot. “No you
wouldn’t because that is my mate, and
what we do together is sacred.” Sutton formed
his next words carefully. “What is it
the two of you are doing? Because I must
say, Wesley, if feeding from my nephew gives you the ability to conjure the
dead then this is more than a partnership.”
“And I have to tell you, whatever we do on our own
time is none of your business, Uncle or not.
I have work to do. Even crazy
people hold jobs.” Wes slammed a rolling
chair under the table and went back to his seat on the other side. He declined to look at Adrian because he knew
the hostility he’d receive. Adrian may
have offered to feed Wes, but it was supposed to have been private, a “thank
you for introducing me to the other side” kind of gift. It wasn’t meant to be work gossip, fueled by
a protective uncle who thought his nephew wasn’t ready for certain things.
He’s
not some virtuous maiden, Donohue. Get a
life!
Now Wes was sure he would never get near Adrian like
that again, no matter how scientifically wondrous their relationship just became. Wes knew what he saw and if that was because
he drank from Adrian, then great. If
not, well, he still wasn’t crazy.
The rest of the day was a whirlwind of passed sticky
notes and charting on the glass boards.
Boards plural as their timeline and suspect profile had grown by leaps
and bounds. Because neither Detective Maloy nor Adrian recognized the stills,
it was up to good old sleuthing to put together the pieces.
“No cameras?”
Sutton rubbed the bridge of his nose.
“I specifically remember seeing cameras at the hotel. What? They were turned off? All the time or… Two days. Show the pictures to the doorman and get back
to me.” He drummed his fingers on the
table. “You did?”
Everyone leaned forward. Wes tasted victory. Sutton stopped drumming his fingers. He lifted a printout of their killer’s grainy
photo to his eyes for several minutes. “Keep
me informed.” He put his phone down and
turned the image around on the table.
“And?” Feist
lifted a hand.
“The doorman positively identified our killer. Seems he was filling in at the front desk for
his dear grandmother who was on holiday for the weekend. They found his so-called grandmother at home
today. She had been swiped, made to
believe she was on vacation indefinitely like a damn loon, sunning herself in
the garden in thirty degree temperatures.
Her daughter thought she’d lost her mind and had to take over duties at
the desk. Says she’s an only child and
has no children of her own, making the grandchild angle a little sloppy on our
killer’s part.”
“We have a name for our killer?”
“A Mr. Leo Redding. He disappeared the night of
graduation, and his short stay at the hotel fits our two day window. According to the doorman Mr. Redding even has
a ponytail. But the real kicker is how
the doorman claims that the night of graduation, Mr. Redding left early,
carrying a garment bag.” Sutton folded
his hands in his lap. He looked around
at his men and stopped at Adrian.
Wes wasn’t sure if Adrian was upset because of the
feeding thing or something else, but when Adrian looked at Sutton, his
expression was murderous. “I saw the guy
at the front desk that night. He was there
when I went upstairs. I saw his face.”
“You could ID him?
Spot him in a crowd?” Sutton asked.
“Yes. He’s tall,
thin, and gangly. I remember he looked
almost sick. He has dark hair, pale
skin, dark eyes, long chin and nose.
I’ll know him when I see him.”
“The name ring any bells to you? I’m positive it’s an alias, but still…it
might have significance.”
Adrian shook his head. “I’ll think about it. Right now we should track his movements,
starting with all major and private airports near the Academy. He would’ve moved quickly, and it wasn’t
exactly a secret where each of us was heading when we all left from the same
airport. The mole would’ve informed him
where I was going immediately. If I was
tracking a target, I would want to be headed for their destination at the same
time or leave before they arrived. My
guess is he left around the same time.
Gave him ample time to take care of Briggs and move out.”
“Good. We
start there. Davis and Fontine, round up
the techs. We’re going to need everyone
we can get with proper clearance. And
make sure they sign the disclosure agreements!”
Feist yelled at Davis’s retreating back.
“Yes, Mom,” Fontine shouted back.
“Wes, I want to know how Redding came to be Maloy’s
plus one. It isn’t a coincidence Adrian’s
stalker happens to be connected to Adrian’s hit. Dig however deep you need to.” Feist waved his hand in Adrian’s face. “Get with your partner and stop spacing
out. No one cares whether or not your
Wes’s walking blood Slurpee. Get back to
work.”
Adrian glared at Feist and then faced Wes. Wes shrugged and opened his laptop. He wasn’t getting into it with his
partner. In fact, Wes hadn’t done
anything wrong to deserve Adrian’s anger.
What was he supposed to have done, lied to his best friend who knew his
every tell? Yeah right. Adrian had to suck it up.
“Bring
your stuff over here.”
Adrian narrowed his eyes.
“Over
here now.”
Adrian was a mountain that had yet to be moved.
“Fine.” Wes pushed his stuff across the table and
went to sit next to his partner. “This works too.”
Had Wes been anyone else, he would’ve missed the
quick smirk of amusement that passed over Adrian’s lips. But he wasn’t just anyone. He was Adrian’s partner, and maybe, given time,
he would mean that in more ways than one. But now wasn’t the time to admit that
to anyone, especially Adrian. Hell,
admitting it to himself was hard enough, and he still had reservations.
Adrian scooted closer a fraction of an inch. He reluctantly put his elbows on the
table—telling Wes he was ready to get involved.
Wes happened to glance at his boss, his best friend,
and knower of all things. Sutton was already
staring his way, eyes a little wide, mouth slightly parted. Wonder and fear were two things that looked
strange on Sutton Donohue at the same time. The Captain looked sick to his
stomach, and whatever he’d seen in Wes and Adrian made him anxiously fidget in
his seat. Sutton coughed, faked clearing
his throat, and then went to fill the empty coffee pot in the corner.
Wes thought he knew what was bothering Sutt, but he
wasn’t sure until he tested his theory. Wasn’t
as if he could simply ask Sutton what his deal was as the lines of
communication between them were still iffy.
They were working on it while managing to still butt heads from time to
time. And every time they danced, it was
around Adrian—the root of all confusion.
Sutton returned to the table, sifting through
paperwork, but really spying on Wes and Adrian while everyone else was
busy. Wes put his hand in his lap and then
slid it over Adrian’s knee where Sutton could see. A cruel thing to do, knowing it would give
Sutton a near aneurism, Wes needed to know where he stood. If Sutton would accept whatever was going on
between Wes and Adrian, if and when things were taken to another level.
Oh how Wes wanted to move things along.
Sutton’s eyes snapped to attention, right to where
Wes’s hand slid up Adrian thigh. He spilled
coffee down the front of his shirt, cursing and dabbing at the stains with his
hands for a minute before he recovered.
Adrian looked up from the laptop where he’d taken over. He shook his head at his Uncle and returned
to his search for Mr. Redding.
Unlike Sutton, Adrian never acknowledged the hand on
his knee, the hand that slid up his thigh and then down again. Wes met Sutton’s eyes, and this time he
shared Sutton’s bewilderment. Wes had expected
a reaction from Adrian—a glare, a snarl, a shove followed by an unwanted smile
he couldn’t hold back. Nope. Adrian didn’t seem to notice Wes’s caress,
like it was a natural thing between the two of them and no one else would care
because people did this all the time.
Wes looked away from Sutton. He didn’t care to deal with the implications
of Sutton’s silent reasoning, what was really going on here. Neither he nor Adrian was equipped for
anything more than feeding and maybe a bit of fun here and there. Not at the moment. Maybe later?
Did he want more, a permanent more?
Sutton didn’t want more. His paling face said as much. However, Wes did; he wanted more and more and
more.
What was he even talking about? Sutton was a lunatic, an overprotective
lunatic that jumped to conclusions.
Talking about mates, scaring him and Adrian shitless like that. Fucking
asshole Sutton. Wes huffed and watched
Adrian’s fingers fly over the keyboard.
They were nice fingers, long and powerful, well used and scarred from
years of fighting. They moved like Wes
imagined a pianist’s would over ivory keys, graceful and with purpose. For a fleeting second Wes imagined what those
fingers would feel like on his skin.
Wes caught himself staring. Adrian caught him too. His partner stopped and leaned in. He whispered, “I still think you’re crazy,
but…good job today.”
It seemed the closer they became, the more human
Adrian learned to be. What appeared to
be a good thing on the outside wasn’t such a great thing on the inside for
Wes. As much as he secretly cherished
the moments Adrian opened up to him, the times Adrian softened around the
edges, Wes knew how dangerous it would be for Adrian to lose that baser part of
himself. The eighty-five percent of
Adrian that was a stone cold killer really needed to be high alert.
Now that they’d entered the killer’s game, it wasn’t
the time for Adrian to relax and get cozy with Wes. It was time to learn the rules and play the
most treacherous game of their lives.
Wes couldn’t interfere with that. As he pulled his hand away, returning
Adrian’s sentiment with a forced smile, Wes conceded to Sutton’s reasoning. Wes had to protect Adrian the only way he
could without a weapon, by not getting more of what he wanted. What he needed.
Chapter 16
Wes and Adrian decided to break the day into two shifts
to catch up on sleep, and Adrian had taken the evening hours. It was around eleven when Adrian practically
flew through door from the front hallway.
Instead of looking as haggard as Wes did, he acted energized and ready
for another eight hours of digging. He
shut the door with a bang, kicked off his boots, and padded over to the
breakfast bar window like he’d won a million dollars.
Too tired to figure Adrian out, Wes pushed a plate
of pasta to him and waited. Adrian was
just buzzing with excitement. He
quivered with it, shoving massive bites of pasta into his mouth because his
body required food before he could reveal whatever had him jazzed. He groaned
down a glass of water, wiped his hand over his mouth and sighed.
“I
have never seen someone so excited to eat my pasta in my entire life.” Wes leaned against the counter. “You
want some more?”
“In
a minute.” Adrian
shed his jacket, the ugly beat up leather one Wes wished he would throw out in
lieu of a real suit. “We found something. Well, I found something.”
Wes perked up.
“What?”
“Davis and I hacked into the LaGuardia database to
roll through their video footage from our arrival day. No sign of Redding getting off the flight or
at baggage claim, so we thought we might have to circle the other terminals.”
“He used a different airline or what?”
Adrian grinned.
“No. He was on our flight.”
“How is that possible? He’s not invisible.”
“It might be cliché, but when in doubt use a
disguise. A really good one.”
“Bullshit. If
he’s as ugly as he sounds, that would have to be some disguise.” Wes snorted.
“I could pull off a disguise that you wouldn’t be
able to spot me if I walked right past you.
This guy is pro, Wes. He knows
how to do this. I wouldn’t have gone
bleach blond, but it certainly did wonders for his coloring.” Adrian pulled out his phone. He turned it around for Wes to see. “That’s Redding there.” He pointed to a tall,
blond man with short hair. The guy
carted a carry-on bag, wore faded jeans and a sweater. Average.
He looked so very average.
“Redding goes into the restroom here.” Adrian slid to another picture. “Timestamps indicate he was in there for around
fifteen minutes, and then here he exits the restroom.”
Sure enough, Redding was caught on camera leaving
the restroom with his signature black ponytail.
He’d changed into black jeans and boots and a grey hoodie. He was still average to every stranger in
that terminal, but not to the Detectives looking for him.
Wes growled, now as excited as Adrian. “Passenger manifest?”
Adrian’s blue eyes sparkled with danger. “Leonardo Redding. Seat 13B.”
“Gutsy to use the same name.”
“Oh, this is where it gets good. Leonardo Redding is his latest persona.” Adrian folded his hands over the bar. “Davis cross referenced the alias with the no
fly list. There are over fourteen alias’
that fit Redding to a T. Artemus Reddgrove
was the first to make the list, wanted for the assassination of our Spanish
Ambassador five years ago. They still
haven’t found him, but they have a blurry black and white of Redding at a
coffee shop across from the Embassy and several eye witnesses that saw him exiting
the rear of the building near the time of the Ambassador’s death. It’s him.”
“You think…”
“Of course I do.
Redding might have been part of a coven at one time, but from his list
of priors, I’m positive he broke away on his own. He’s a straight up hit man.”
“What
does his list of priors have to do with you?”
“Still not sure on that part, but we do have a
connection to Ulysses. The Spanish
Ambassador that Redding killed was exposed as a pedophile after his death. He’d been keeping company with underage boys
for well over a decade, and those boys were more than happy to try and make
some money with the media. They claimed
they were part of program called His Children, some Christian based homeless
outfit for boys on the streets. In
reality, the charity was turning out tricks and making money off their
residents.”
“They were shut down?”
Adrian shook his head. “Not a shred of proof. They have an army of lawyers funded by the
good Christians of Europe and other financially sound donors that might sound
familiar.”
“Ulysses Maloy,” Wes spat. “That fucking asshole.”
“Yep. His
bank statements show he’s donated to His Children for the last twenty-five
years in the collective amount of near ten million dollars. And I bet anything that boy he was with the
night I killed him was part of His Children.
A runaway with nowhere to go, looking to make a few dollars to feed
himself.”
Wes felt a stab of pain in his heart for what that
kid must have gone through that night.
He couldn’t help but take delight in Ulysses’s brutal death. “So Redding doesn’t like pedophiles but he
keeps company with one? Connect the dots
for me.”
Adrian nodded.
“After reviewing everything I could get my hands on, I’d say he was
circling the operation, getting close to the biggest players to take them down
one by one. Over thirty of them are dead
now, five natural causes, and the others foul play. Not one arrest. I think our bad guy might have a good cause.”
“You think he lost someone close to him that entered
His Children?”
“Wes, I think Redding might have been one of those
children. They’ve been in operation
since the early nineties, and I’m sure their boys weren’t strictly human. If Redding had lost someone to HC, he would
have taken his revenge on the person who defiled his loved one and then
probably have blown the main office to bits to send a message. But from what I’ve seen this is a personal
vendetta. He’s out to make them hurt
just like he was hurt.”
“Then why you?
What have you done to him?” Wes
grew agitated. Something wasn’t
clicking. If the bad guy had good
intentions, no matter how twisted, how did Adrian fit into his pedophile
whacking party?
“I don’t know.” Adrian rubbed at the back of his neck,
getting the kinks out. “I can profile this guy up and down, but I
have no clue why he’s out for me.”
The minute Adrian started to wind down from his
excitement, Wes sensed his overwhelming sadness. Adrian’s eight hours of digging left him
high, only to fall when the adrenaline wore off. “You
need to sleep, Adrian. Have you even
slept this week?”
“Here
and there.”
Wes exited the kitchen and walked into the living
room. He stopped next to Adrian and
lifted his chin. “Are you afraid to sleep?”
Adrian’s eyes said it all. Defenseless and tired, his baby blues gave
him away. “Maybe.”
“Why? Are you
seeing things? Are Briggs’s possessions
working?”
“No, it’s not Briggs. I wouldn’t hold that back from you. Any evidence would be appreciated right now.”
Wes sat down on the stool and bumped knees with
Adrian. “Something else bothering you?”
“I don’t want
to talk about it.”
“I know you don’t,
but you’re no good to us exhausted. You
have to sleep sometime.” Wes reached out
and tucked Adrian’s curly bangs behind his ear.
What should have scared them both, such a warm
gesture of comfort, was as normal as breathing.
“When I sleep, I dream about things I don’t want to
remember. I can’t wake up if I don’t set
my alarm or the motion sensors.” Adrian
lifted his wrist, showing his watch to Wes.
“I’m trapped in my dreams and what I see…I can’t forget.”
“This is just you and me. You can talk to me, Adrian. You don’t have to sleep under the bed with a
gun. You don’t have to be trapped in
your head all alone. We talk this out
and maybe you can dream easier.”
“Like therapy?
I don’t need therapy.” Adrian
pulled away.
Wes grabbed Adrian’s arm, tugging him closer than
before. He spoke slow and deliberately,
leaning back for Adrian to read his lips.
“I’m saying you let me help you deal with the shit in your head because
I’m your partner. You don’t think I have
nightmares I can’t wake up from? They
used to be constant. I’d scream for
hours, thinking I was trapped back in the basement with my wrists chained to a
wall. Them torturing me for fun…”
“You don’t have to tell me this.” Adrian looked away, bowing his head.
Wes let go of Adrian’s arm to cup his cheeks. When Adrian’s blue eyes met his, Wes said,
“I’m telling you because I trust you with the worst part of my life. I have faith you’ll pull me out if I get
trapped. I want to be there for you too. We’re not partners for nothing.”
Adrian’s chest rose and fell swiftly. He was so close Wes tasted Adrian on his
tongue. The Senior Detective wanted to
take Adrian in his arms and hold him until he admitted his deepest, darkest
secrets. Wes wanted to unburden Adrian
and make him feel right again. To hell
with not interfering; this shit with Adrian was too hard not to give in.
“I’m always burning alive,” Adrian whispered. “I can never put out the fire. He stands
there doing nothing to help me. Just
watches me burn…”
His
fear of fire… Wes skimmed his thumbs down Adrian’s
jaw. “Who does?”
Adrian wiped his eyes, gently pushing Wes’s hands
away from his face. He licked his lips,
grazing his bottom lip with his teeth. Adrian
was scared to say, having never told another soul the answer. But by answering, he would reaffirm Wes’s
faith—that Adrian trusted him too. “My father.”
This time, Wes didn’t hold back. He gathered Adrian in his arms, felt his
partner’s powerful body collapse against him.
Adrian clung to Wes like a magnet.
He didn’t sob or get choked up.
Adrian simply needed to make a connection when he was worried. Adrian had never had someone like Wes before,
never someone to let go with. Wes held
Adrian, slipping his thick arms around Adrian’s back, pressing his partner to
his chest until all the air escaped Adrian’s lungs.
When Adrian leaned back, taking a steadying breath,
Wes knew he’d done a good thing. Adrian
wasn’t magically cured, but it was a start.
A start that would take things to the next level, just not the level Wes
wanted before. With Adrian, everything
would be baby steps. Healing Adrian was
more important than hooking up. Much
more important.
To prove he was more than a massive hothead who
occasionally had a soft moment, Wes took charge in a bold way. Telling Adrian he wasn’t alone didn’t mean
shit if Wes didn’t show him. And Adrian
wasn’t about to leap from the partner side of the fence to the unknown side on
his own. He was a visual learner, an
imitator of human interaction with his own flare. Just like every other time since Adrian had
stepped into Wes’s life, Wes just needed to show Adrian this was okay too.
Wes slipped his hand into Adrian’s and pulled him to
his feet. “You lock the door?”
Adrian nodded.
“Maloy outside when you came in?”
Adrian nodded again, confusion forming a wrinkle
between his brows. “Yeah.”
“Good. Let’s
go to bed.” Wes didn’t give Adrian a
chance to argue with his plan. He wasn’t
afraid Adrian would retaliate and pull a gun on him or try and break his
arm. Adrian wouldn’t very well kill his
closest friend. Smugly aware of that, Wes
used his strength to pull Adrian behind him, tugging when Adrian tried to drag
his feet. They climbed the stairs to
Wes’s room, all twelve of them without a word.
Wes’s room wasn’t but a few square feet bigger than
Adrian’s. And even then most of it was
taken up by his large platform bed topped with a thick down comforter. Wes made sure Adrian was inside before he
shut the heavy door and slid four deadbolts into place. He had a thing about security after all he’d
been through in his lifetime, and now he was thankful those locks served
another purpose—to keep his partner safe as well.
He didn’t coddle Adrian or give him instructions
when Adrian stood there with his hands in pockets and his heart racing. He would get the gist after a few minutes if
he hadn’t caught on already. Wes went to
the flat screen television opposite his bed, turned it on, and then logged into
the monitoring system that showed the cameras around the house. He pulled his shirt over his head and put it
on the dresser.
“Anything
moves in this house and we’ll know. You
can put your gun in the side table.” Wes
sat on the edge of the bed. He stared at Adrian. “You
okay if I close the blinds? I like it
pretty dark when I sleep, except for that.” He pointed at the television
and shrugged.
Adrian sucked in air through his nose. He glared.
“I’m not sleeping with you.”
“Yes you are.”
Wes stood and pulled back the covers.
“And not in those jeans.” He
proceeded to pull his sweatpants down his hips, letting them pool on the floor;
partly because he wasn’t body conscious in nothing but underwear, and partly to
make Adrian squirm.
Wes took satisfaction in Adrian’s startled
expression, in the way his heart sounded like it skipped it beat, and the
intense arousal drifting through the air.
“If you refuse to sleep by
yourself then I have to make you sleep with me.
It’s not healthy all the hours you put in as it is, and when you’re
walking around dead on your feet, you’re just putting another nail in your
coffin. You either willingly sleep in
this bed next to me or I drug you.”
“That’s supposed
to make me get in that bed? Threats!” Adrian
lifted his hands to the heavens, his version of what the fuck.
“If
you think I’m crazy, that’s fine. I’m
trying to take care of you.”
“You
are crazy!” Adrian
spun his pointer finger next to his temple.
Wes rolled his eyes.
He crossed the room slowly, allowing Adrian a good look at his white
cotton briefs. They weren’t anything
special, but they sure got a rise out of Adrian in more ways than one. “Get in bed.”
“Absolutely not.”
“Adrian.” Wes
put a hand above Adrian’s head and leaned on the wall. “Get into that bed. Now.
If you wanted to leave you would have done so the moment I started
locking the door, but you didn’t. I got maybe
three hours of sleep before you got home and I’m not getting any more with you
still standing here.”
“Want me to leave?”
Adrian swallowed. “I can
leave.” He didn’t move an inch. More like he began to sag into the wall,
letting Wes’s imposing body shelter his against the wall.
Wes put his other hand to the side of Adrian’s
head. “Do I want you to leave… You a
comedian now?”
“No,” Adrian said, looking away.
Wes, going on instinct, nudged Adrian with his nose,
skin against skin. There wasn’t much left to say in this position. Wes stepped into Adrian, aligning their
bodies. He slid his hands down the wall,
around Adrian’s arms to the hem of Adrian’s t-shirt. When Adrian didn’t protest, Wes pulled
Adrian’s shirt up his chest. Inch by
inch he lifted soft cotton over Adrian’s abs, allowing the heel of his palm to
skim over hard muscle.
Finally Adrian looked at Wes. For the man to have been a violent killer
afraid of nothing, Adrian sure as hell looked scared now. Not scared Wes would hurt him, scared he had
no idea what he was doing. Everything in
Adrian’s life had been about planning, details down pat, with even the
surprises thought of beforehand. So the
spontaneity of this moment was new and perplexing, enough to make anyone
apprehensive—even the most lethal boys of all.
Adrian flexed his fingers, pressed his lips together
and then closed his eyes. Wes caught
Adrian’s soft inhale, enjoyed it like a cold beer after a long day. Adrian didn’t ruin the moment; he kept on
going and lifted his arms over his head for Wes to continue. Wes pressed his palms flat over Adrian’s
pectorals for a second, felt firm muscle greet him. And while the moment was intense and heated,
anticipated by both parties for weeks now, Wes had no intention of giving
Adrian more than he was ready for. However
hard it was to put a lid on his libido, Wes needed the trust to continue
between them. Tonight was about sleep
and comfort. Nothing more.
He whisked Adrian’s shirt over his head and let it
fall to the floor. Adrian’s eyes opened
when Wes stepped away, something akin to hurt ran through them. Had Adrian
expected more than sleep? Wes knew he
did. He also knew it wasn’t the right
time and that he needed to cut Adrian a break and stop with the flirting before
things got out of hand.
Wes really did want Adrian to get some rest, and
sleeping next to Adrian sounded fine by him.
The object of his desire wrapped in his blankets, pressed up against him
all night long… Wes liked the sound of
that. He was overcome with possession,
thrilled that in the morning Adrian would smell of his bed, of his skin.
Luckily Wes didn’t have to worry about his partner
hearing the low growl working up his throat.
He did, however, have to keep his expressive eyes in check so as not to
spook the crap of Adrian. Flirtatious
touches and lots of close up contact was one thing; mad eye swirling, fang
dropping, caveman control issues were another.
It’s
getting worse.
Wes turned away from Adrian and continued turning down the bed. You’re
dropping words like relationship and mate.
Your fangs come out and your dick gets hard every time he looks at
you. You’re feeding all the time now.
What’s worse is he comes and asks you to. You got him up here to have a slumber party
and you have no intention of sticking it to him. Wake up, Durren. You know exactly what’s going on.
Wes listened.
Adrian’s belt buckle hit the floor; his jeans worked down his thighs,
the sound of denim brushing against cotton.
Adrian’s hand thumped against the wall as he struggled to get his socks
off. The smell of Adrian, his soapy,
natural scent was thick, wrapping Wes up until he wanted to gasp as his insides
were twisted into a knot. His gun went
into the drawer. His phone slid over the
side table. Adrian was giving in.
He’s
mine. Wes confessed to
the city peeking through his open blinds.
Sutton had once told Wes when he’d first met Vertina there was no
possible way to explain a mating. There
was no true way to describe the way a vampire felt when he first realized they
had found their destined one. There was
no way or reason to fight the pull, no matter how wrong it felt or forced it
seemed, because the truth of the matter was that fate designed you for them and
them for you and why would you pass that up.
Sutton never lingered on the details, other than the
age old “everyone’s mating is different” lecture. Humans, Humans-turns, Royals, and traitors
alike were all in the same hat, waiting for their names to be drawn. It could happen at any time, in any place,
and no two matings were alike. It was
all Wes knew about the situation he was now in.
He had changed since meeting Adrian. He’d be a fool not to notice how he’d started
to warm up to the others, thinking before acting and listening instead of
yelling. He’d started to enjoy the
silence and appreciate the beauty of his hands and expressions, often imagining
Adrian’s world and how the quiet could be his friend too.
Wes had also changed Adrian, formerly a wild stray cat
who bit and clawed his way out of any situation. Now he smiled and purred, he rubbed against
Wes’s leg for a scrap of praise. He
trusted Wes to feed him, to keep him warm even though they couldn’t have a
fire, and now to shoulder the weight of his nightmares when he was too tired to
carry them.
Adrian had become Wes’s confidant, his friend, and
in a twisted way his teacher in life. In
all the years Wes had been alive he’d never learned more than in the past few
weeks he’d spent with Adrian. He learned
he liked blue eyes, especially when they brightened with excitement. Wes learned he liked being near someone after
years of pushing others away in favor of the quiet. He learned Adrian was the quiet he’d been
seeking all along, and yet Adrian was the loudest person in a room even when he
didn’t say a word.
When Wes emphasized being a part of a team to
Adrian, Wes never imagined he’d learn how to become a part of one too. He called Adrian his partner. He meant it.
For the first time in Wes’s life, he didn’t want to be on his own.
Wes turned when a finger tapped his shoulder. Adrian stared at him, waiting, uncertain if
he’d made a mistake by coming up here. He
tried his hardest to hide it but he wasn’t getting anything past Wes. The Senior Detective ran his hand over
Adrian’s shoulder, now aware of the connection between his palm and Adrian’s
skin. The gap begged to be closed, to be
sealed. Unfortunately, now wasn’t the
time.
As Adrian had done for most of life, Wes would show
this man what was between them instead of telling him. He traced Adrian’s upper arm down to the
elbow and turned Adrian towards the bed.
Adrian climbed in, moving over for Wes to get in too. The first few minutes were awkward; a lot of
rolling and tossing and pillow fluffing to pass the time.
Soon they settled in, Wes on his back and Adrian on
his side, staring at the wall. The glow
from the television kept the room from being completely dark after Wes tapped
the lamp and turned out the lights. He
was able to look over and make out Adrian’s form huddled under the covers.
A few pillows separated them. Pillows Wes removed one by one. If he wasn’t going to be fulfilling his
ultimate fantasies tonight, at least he’d be as close as possible to Adrian
while they slept. Adrian immediately
went rigid as Wes pressed his chest against Adrian’s back and wound his arm
around Adrian’s waist.
Wes counted to ten, hoping and praying he hadn’t
just fucked everything up. Wes was
almost to eleven when Adrian relaxed.
His fingers brushed over Wes’s and soon his breathing evened out. As much as Wes wanted to watch Adrian sleep,
his eyelids became heavy. He buried his nose against Adrian’s neck and closed
his eyes, giving over to sleep.
Chapter 17
Unable to tell the difference between Wes’s sleepy
rumblings against Adrian’s neck and the vibration of Adrian’s watch waking him
up, Adrian decided to wake up. It had
been a long time since Adrian was able to wake on his own, and he’d been
contemplating opening his eyes well before his watch told him to this morning. Not
a single dream invaded his rest last night.
Not one flickering flame. A ghost
didn’t whisper messages from beyond.
He just slept in Wes’s arms all night long. In a real bed that had been designed for
comfort and not necessity with many warm layers and soft pillows. Adrian knew he couldn’t get used to this way
of sleep; last night had stressed Wes out.
Adrian saw it, no matter how in control Wes had been. And even though Wes’s discomfort had been
apparent, there was no denying he wanted Adrian in his bed.
Now Adrian was left to process this new facet to his
and Wes’s relationship. Sure, Adrian had
had sex with both men and women; partly for his job as a Hunter, to play a part
and gain information, and partly to release tension in his body. It’d never been about anything other than sex
and intelligence. He didn’t sleep
through the night with any of them. He’d
never had sex in someone’s actual bed before, favoring hotels and back alleys,
and a kitchen counter or two.
Last night, Adrian had been ready to have sex with
Wes, in Wes’s bed, because he wanted to get closer to his partner. He had every intention of giving over to
Wesley Durren. He had every intention of
allowing Wes to kiss him deeply and whisper stuff Adrian would never hear. Because deep down Adrian knew his partner was
after more than a roll in bed. He was
after everything Adrian was willing to share—heart, body, and mind.
Adrian had undressed in cold silence, hoping Wes
would at least turn around to make some connection. He’d even stowed away his gun in the
nightstand, showing Wes he trusted him.
He’d put away the remote to the foyer, leaving business out of the
equation. And then he stood there in his
underwear, waiting for Wes to do something.
They’d come this far and Adrian had been so sure Wes wanted him. He was made to trust and to care for this
man. Yet, he didn’t get a single look in
return.
Adrian had gone out on a limb, a dangerous one,
because he was ready for this change in his life. In the end, Adrian had been the one to go to
Wes, and all he received was a friendly push into the bed. The lights had gone out, Wes had settled
against him, and that was that.
What Adrian had imagined in Wes’s eyes last night,
the hunger, the need, and the fierce protectiveness over Adrian had all been
some sort of dream. Wes was just being a good friend, a partner,
making sure Adrian got some sleep.
People like Wes were surely meant to be with someone else, someone not
as fucked up as Adrian.
Adrian’s eyes adjusted to the darkness, surveying
the room’s scant belongings covered in a bluish glow from the television. Slipping out from under Wes’s arm, Adrian sat
on the edge of the bed and looked at his watch.
He was about to turn off the alarm when he saw the time and immediately
went to the windows in the corner. He
pulled the blinds open. It was still
dark out. It was only three in the
morning.
What
the hell? Adrian
looked at his watch. His alarm hadn’t
gone off. He had ten text messages and
three missed calls. All of their teammates
tried to contact him.
Open
the damn door!
Got
the door open and there’s a gun pointed at my head.
We
have another body.
I’m
calling in GERT if you don’t answer in the next five minutes.
ADRIAN!! The texts and
voicemails translated into text streamed across his watch. They’d discovered another body, same style as
Redding. Sutton was with the
parents? What did that mean?
“Fuck!”
Adrian shook Wes.
Wes covered his eyes with his forearm and slapped
Adrian’s leg.
Noticing Wes’s phone glowing on the side table,
Adrian picked it up once he saw who was calling. “Sutton, its Adrian. Just woke up.
We’re on our way.” He threw the
phone on the bed.
That got Wes’s attention. The lights snapped on and the Senior
Detective threw the covers back. “What’s going on?”
Adrian pushed his legs through his jeans and
buttoned them up. “Davis and Fontine are downstairs.
Feist called us in, we got another body.
Sutton is with the victim’s family.”
Wes didn’t need to be told twice. He pulled on some jeans from the back of the
door, tucked his gun away at the small of his back, and then unlocked his
bedroom door. Adrian followed him down
the stairs to greet Fontine and Davis at the door. They were pissed, understandably so, and when
they got a load of Wes and Adrian shirtless and bed rumpled, their anger kicked
into high gear.
“You don’t ignore us for sex. You got it?”
Davis pushed Wes into the living room.
“I thought you two were dead!”
Something inside Adrian snapped. All he saw was Davis manhandling Wes and Wes not
putting up a fight. He pushed between
the two Detectives and gripped Davis by the throat. Didn’t care if Davis was a full blooded
vampire or that Davis had kicked his ass on the mat too many times to count. “You touch him like that again and I will
slit your damn throat.”
“Get your hands off me before I hurt you,
Adrian. You have no idea how scared we
were. None!” Davis bared his fangs. A split second later he put his hands up, his
eyes going wide. “Fine. You two wanna fuck around while we try and
find the guy that’s trying to kill you, that’s fine by me. Your funeral.”
Adrian spun around to see Wes with his gun drawn,
pointed at Davis. “Wes, stop. Put it down.”
He glanced at Davis. “He just
woke up and came right downstairs. Not
that it’s any of your business, but we were actually asleep. He’s tired and stressed out.”
“Well aren’t we all sweet nothings in the morning?” Davis shook his head. “Adrian, Wes has been at this for years.”
Davis dropped his hands. “We all
have. You expect calls like this. You expect to get woken up when you haven’t
slept in weeks. You expect dead bodies
to show up in the middle of the night and you expect to have to drag your ass
out of bed and investigate. What you
don’t expect is a gun in your face because you were trying to protect your
friend. You don’t expect to be attacked
by his partner for protecting both of you.
You don’t expect to spend an hour jimmying locks to reach them because
they could both be dead. More than
anything you don’t expect a good Detective to let his guard down so he can get
some from someone he’s becoming a liability to.”
Fontine pulled Davis back. He glared at Adrian. “Maybe next time you should sleep in your own
bed. Get dressed and meet us
outside. Don’t forget to bring to your
mate.”
The door slammed shut. Davis and Fontine left Adrian staring at the
slab of metal that led to the front hall.
He held his breath for as long as he could and then let it out in a
rush. Of all the things he hadn’t been
expecting, Fontine’s parting words made the top of the list.
Mate…
Adrian
finally gained enough courage to face Wes.
When he turned around, all he found was an empty living room and a
night’s worth of regret.
To be continued...
I will stalk you and torture you if you don't get the next bits up soon! I mean that in the best way possible, of course :D
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean Elaina! Please post the next one soon I am spook loving this story and I don't have much patience when it comes to it. Love your work.
ReplyDeleteTasha
I shouldn't have read this so late at night, ghost stuff freaks me out! Blame you Night, if I can't sleep tonight!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant stuff though, fast paced, sexual tension doing my head in, wanna read more!
;-)
- Faolin
Hope everything is well. I was so happy when I saw this. I've been rereading the past chapters to keep me from going crazy. I'm dying here with all the suspense between Wes and Adrian, Sutton and Wes, and the who dunnit. So good Night! I'm with Elaina though, I will stalk you to get my next fix.
ReplyDeleteI love, love love this story. I was so happy to see this posted today. I love the growth in both Adrian and Wes. Once they solve the case and acknowledge that they are mates, they will be an awesome couple.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait for the next installment!
Dang it I had to work late tonight......came home and guess what I found a HOT new chapter!!!! Can't wait for the next installment!!!
ReplyDeleteWonderful segment; worth waiting for. I love the complexity of the relationships and how they're evolig and growing. Wes and Adrian make a great couple.
ReplyDeleteExcited for all the drama, mystery, and romance packed into one! Can't wait for shit to finally go down and the mystery to unravel --who his stalker is, his intentions, Briggs, etc.
ReplyDeleteAnd at last they realize! Haha, Wes is gonna go nuts! I can already hear the line "Wes could feel Adrian's shock" hurting him and trying to pull away so Adrian doesn't get hurt before the danger is over. This couple has a long way to go before their journey's over :))
This is snotty, but please update sooner! We eagerly await the next installment.
You cant stop there!!! OMG what are you trying to do to us?! Pleeaassee post more soon. And thanks, as always, for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteI'm lovin' this story like everyone else!
ReplyDeleteSomething to consider if you do an edit: I was thrown by the talk of Sutton's jealousy at the beginning of the chapter. I felt like there weren't enough examples of his behavior to make us think that. I understood Sutton and Wes bumping heads because Sutton effed things up so badly with Adrian, but the jealously aspect took me by surprise. Just something to think about.
Also, it's interesting to me that Adrian sees sex as a means to an end, even with Wes. And yet he asks Wes to feed from him -- I'm assuming because it gives him pleasure. That's an aspect I hope you explore more.
Great work!! -- Geemeedee
Happy to see your back. Here I am reading Cia's blog and see your update and I'm happy I did. There's just something about Adrian that leaves a soft with me but there the bad ass that makes me love him all the more. Great post Ms.Night
ReplyDeleteConsider yourself officially stalked, lady bug. I've reread this every day since it was posted, trying (and failing miserably, might I add) to be patient. Hah! Me, patient...I can't even say that with a straight face =) Can't wait until the next installment =)
ReplyDelete