Free Read Novels Online Home

Immortally Yours by Lynsay Sands (14)

“Can you no’ turn this music down? I think me ears are bleedin’,” Scotty complained from the back seat.

Beth chuckled at the claim, and leaned forward to turn it down, but then asked, “So you’d rather go back to Donny talking?”

“Hey!” Donny bent to peer down into the SUV from where he stood on the back seat with his head, shoulders, and chest out of the vehicle through the sunroof. “What happened to the music? Did you shut it off? Did he shut it off? Do you think it’s broken? Maybe it’s not the radio. Maybe it’s the station. Maybe the satellite was knocked out of the sky or—”

“Turn it back up!” Scotty barked.

“That’s what I thought,” Beth said with a laugh and cranked up the volume again.

“Yeah!” Donny shouted and straightened to continue playing air guitar in the open night air as they sped down the highway. She should have probably ordered the boy to sit down and put his seat belt on, but honestly, he’d turned into such a chatterbox once the caffeine had hit him, she’d rather risk it. Beth made a mental note to herself to warn Mortimer that Donny shouldn’t be allowed coffee. Ever. He was one of the immortals it did affect.

Much to everyone’s relief, it was only a couple moments later when Matias slowed as he approached the driveway of a nice ranch-style home she thought might be clad in light brown brick. She wasn’t certain. While the increased night vision immortals enjoyed allowed them to see relatively clearly in the dark, it wasn’t that great when it came to colors. But between her night vision and the fact that the driveway ran up the edge of the property a good thirty feet to the side of the house, Beth was able to see that while the front yard was small and neat, the backyard was absolutely huge with more than enough room for the large six-car garage and the attached outbuilding it housed.

The driveway led up beside and past the house to those buildings, but it also had a branch that broke off to run along the front of the house. Matias turned onto that, and steered them up to the front door before stopping.

The minute Matias shut off the engine, the loud raucous music died. Donny immediately dropped back into his seat.

“Man, we’re here!” he exclaimed as if they might have missed that fact. “I was really rocking it. You have great taste in music, Matias. We should unload, huh?” Throwing the SUV’s side door open, he bounded out of the back seat and ran around to the back of the vehicle.

“Ye had to let him drink the coffee, didn’t ye?” Scotty said with disgust.

“Espresso,” Beth corrected him. “And it’s better we know how he reacts to it now than on the job. Fortunately, he has lots of time to get it out of his system. We’re on a bit of a vacation right now,” she reminded him with a smile.

“Yeah, great,” Scotty said, following the younger man out of the vehicle. Beth couldn’t help noticing he sounded unimpressed.

“This Scotty, he is a grumpy bastard, no?” Matias commented as he undid his seat belt. Smiling at her then, he added, “And he has the thing for you.”

Beth froze in the process of getting out of the vehicle, and jerked around to stare at him with dismay. “No, he doesn’t.”

Matias just grinned and nodded slowly. “, he does. He was wanting to tear my head off at the airport when you were in my arms. He has the thing.”

Beth glanced nervously toward the back of the vehicle to make sure that Scotty wasn’t hearing any of this. Much to her relief, she could see that Donny was busy chatting his ear off, hopefully preventing his hearing their conversation. Just in case, though, she decided she’d best keep her voice low. Turning back to Matias, she hissed, “He’s eight hundred and some years old, long past the days of sex and crushes and whatnot. He doesn’t have a ‘thing’ for me. And if you say that in front of him, I’ll scratch your eyes out, wait for them to grow back in and then scratch them out again.”

The old threat merely made Matias laugh and shake his head. He did, however, get out of the vehicle rather quickly and hurry around to join the men at the back of the SUV. He probably hoped there’d be safety in numbers, Beth thought with disgust as she got out to follow him.

“So, there are only three bedrooms,” Matias was saying as she joined the men. “Two of you will have to share a bed.”

Beth scowled at his suggestive tone and the way he waggled his eyebrows as he glanced between her and Scotty. She really should scratch his eyes out, she thought grimly, but merely said, “Scotty and Donny can share.”

“If there are three bedrooms, why do we have to share?” Donny asked. “Beth can have one. Scotty can have one. I can have one. That’s three bedrooms. That’s good. Three bedrooms is good. It’s perfect. Like it was made for us. Three bedrooms, three people.”

“Three bedrooms and four people,” Matias corrected him. “One bedroom is mine already. So, you will share.”

“Great,” Scotty growled, dragging a large leather bag out of the back of the SUV.

“That’s okay. Really. It’ll be okay. We can share. I’m a good roommate. I don’t snore. Do you snore? Never mind. It doesn’t matter. Fine. It’ll be fine. We’re fine,” Donny shot out in staccato sentences as he followed Scotty into the house.

“Oh, , the Scotty, he has this thing for you and he has it bad,” Matias said with delight as they watched the two men disappear into the house.

“Why?” she asked with exasperation as she dragged her bags out one after the other and began to sling them over her shoulders. “Why would you even imagine that?”

“Because he has not killed you for letting Donny drink the espresso. Even though he knows he will be stuck with the man tonight.”

Beth tried to hold on to her scowl. She truly did, but couldn’t help it and her expression cracked as a laugh slipped from her lips. She covered her mouth quickly and shook her head. “It isn’t funny. Donny is going to make him crazy.”

“Nah,” he said lightly. Taking two of her bags, he reminded her, “We are going dancing. Donny can work the caffeine out of his system on the dance floor and I will finally have a proper rumba partner again. Truly, chiquita, the girls here do not know how to dance.”

“Dancing. Right. I forgot about that,” Beth said with a smile as they headed into the house.

“Forgot about what?” Scotty asked, meeting them in the entry. His hands were empty, and Beth glanced past him to see that he’d set his own bags on the floor just inside the door of the first room on the left, a small living room decorated in earth tones and overstuffed furniture.

“That we are going dancing and Donny can work off the caffeine on the dance floor,” Beth explained.

“Oh, dear God, aye,” Scotty said with relief. “If I have to share a room with the lad chattering away like he is now, I’m like to kill him.”

“Speaking of which, where is he?” Beth asked.

“Hey! I found the kitchen!” Donny’s voice came from the back of the house in answer. “Does anyone else want blood? I found the fridge. And food! Good food! Cheese and sausage. Whipped cream. Dip too. I love dip. Are there chips? Jeez, this is great stuff. Things I haven’t had since I started training. Bologna and salami! Sliced smoked turkey! I could make us Dagwoods!”

“Bologna?” Beth peered at Matias with disbelief. “Your mother would shoot you for even bringing all that junk into the house.”

“It tastes good,” Matias said helplessly.

“Oh wow! Look at the backyard. It’s huge!” Donny cried and then asked excitedly, “Are those dogs back there? Man, they’re beautiful. Scary-looking too, but they’re probably nice dogs. They just look scary. Right?”

“Dogs?” Beth asked, her eyebrows rising. Matias had always wanted a dog. But his mother, Aunt Giulietta, thought they were messy and smelly and wouldn’t let him have one as he was growing up.

“Sí.” Matias beamed at her. “Two Dobermans. They are beautiful. I only put them outside when I am not here so they do not ruin the furniture. One of them, Chico, he tried to eat the couch when I left him home alone for a couple hours, so now they must wait in the kennel until I can be with them.”

“I see,” Beth said and shook her head. “Aunt Giulietta hasn’t visited you here yet, has she?”

Sí,” he assured her. “Mama has been here twice, but I had a friend keep the dogs while she was here both times.”

The sound of a door slamming made all three of them glance toward the back of the house.

Eyebrows rising, Scotty headed down the hall, with Beth following closely on his heels. There were several doors on the right, each seeming to lead into a bedroom. But there was only one doorway on the left and it was at the far end of the hall. She and Scotty turned in to a family room that took up the near side of the large open space, while a kitchen filled the other half. She spotted the door that had slammed at once. It was in the back corner on the kitchen side, but she didn’t move toward it. Instead, she stared out the large windows that seemed to make up the back wall of the house. Through them, she could see the huge backyard, the two outbuildings, and Donny running toward a kennel where two beautiful Doberman pinschers were jumping at the fence, barking excitedly as the ginger-haired man approached.

“Will they bite him?” Beth asked with concern.

“I do not know,” Matias admitted with a frown. “He is terribly excited and if he excites them too much . . .”

“Crap,” Beth breathed and hurried to the door to go after the young immortal.

“I’m thinking we should take him dancing sooner rather than later,” Matias called after them as Scotty followed her.

Beth was too busy running to comment, but she thought that was a damned good idea.

 

“Have you known Matias long?”

Scotty winced at that loud shout in his ear and tore his gaze away from Beth’s gyrating body on the dance floor to peer down at the girl who had cozied up to him on the couch. She was one of the half-dozen women who had been draping themselves all over Matias since they’d arrived here more than an hour ago. He seemed to be popular. But Scotty supposed the little girl with blue hair leaning up against him had tired of trying to vie for the young man’s attention and shifted her focus to him.

“Have you?” she asked again. She was shouting to be heard over the music. He wished she wouldn’t. Her shouting was giving him a headache. Fortunately, she seemed to realize how unattractive having to shout might appear and made a little moue with her lips. She also blinked her eyelashes at him in a way that made him wonder if she had something in her eye . . . or eyes.

“Nay,” he answered her question and then shifted his attention back to the dance floor, finding Beth again as Donny twirled her around to the manic beat.

“Do you like to dance?” the girl tried again.

“Nay,” he answered, not even looking at her this time.

“Do you—”

“Matias,” Scotty growled. He didn’t shout. Immortals had superior hearing and the young Spaniard caught his warning. A moment later the warm weight against his side eased away and then was gone. Scotty supposed the Spaniard had slipped into her thoughts and either urged her back to his side or sent her away. He didn’t care which.

“If you keep staring at her like that she will surely burst into flames.”

Scotty gave a start at that comment and turned to look around. Matias hadn’t sent just the little blue-haired girl away. He’d sent all the women away. He’d also moved next to him on the couch and was eyeing him with curiosity.

“You like my cousin,” he said finally.

Scotty merely turned his gaze back to the dance floor.

“Beth says you are over eight hundred years old. Is that true?” he asked.

“Aye,” he muttered.

“Interesting,” Matias murmured so softly that despite his hearing, Scotty nearly didn’t catch it.

Eyes narrowing, he turned to peer at him in question. “Why?”

Matias hesitated and then, instead of answering, asked, “Why didn’t you want Beth to be a Rogue Hunter?”

Scotty stiffened. “Who says I did no’ want her to be a hunter?”

Matias grinned and raised his eyebrows. “You tried to convince my uncle and Drina not to let her train, and then, once she’d finished training, you traveled to Spain to try to convince the Council to refuse her a position as a hunter. Everyone knows that.”

“Beth too?” he asked with alarm.

Matias nodded. “My uncle sat her down and said you didn’t think she should be a hunter, and he’d argued on her behalf to the Council. He told her not to screw up and prove him wrong.”

Cursing, Scotty glanced back to the dancers. He should have realized that she would find out. Not that it would have stopped him. He’d been desperate to keep her safe. He would have appreciated it had everyone kept their mouths shut, though. It just complicated the situation further, he thought and began to frown, partially because of that, and partially because he couldn’t find Beth on the dance floor.

Where the hell had she got to? he wondered, getting to his feet to improve his view of the dancers.

“What is it?” Matias asked, standing up as well.

“I can no’ find Beth,” he muttered, looking for her little black dress among the dancers. The problem was, there were a ton of women in black. Why the hell would she wear such a common color? She was not a common woman.

“I see Donny,” Matias said after a moment. “Beth’s not with him. Perhaps she went to the ladies’ room.”

“Aye,” Scotty murmured and settled back on the couch.

 

Beth flushed the toilet and stepped out of the stall to find the bathroom apparently empty. There had been half a dozen women primping in the mirror or washing their hands when she’d entered, but it seemed they’d finished their business and left.

Shrugging, she quickly walked to the sink and washed her hands. By the time she finished and turned off the tap, the rushing of water from the toilet had stopped too, leaving the room silent except for the somewhat muffled throb of the music coming from the dance floor . . . and heartbreaking sobs coming from one of the stalls.

Frowning, Beth ripped off a section of paper towel and dried her hands, her gaze traveling along the floor under the row of stalls. Two of them were occupied. The one nearest the door, and one two doors over from that. Beth wasn’t sure from which one the crying was coming, but suspected it was from the one closest to the door.

“Hello? Are you all right?” she asked, tossing the paper into the wastebasket. When she didn’t get an immediate response, Beth walked to the last stall, only to stumble to a stop as it flew open and a young woman hurried out, nearly crashing into her.

“Sorry, sorry,” the woman cried and rushed for the exit.

Beth tried to slip into the woman’s mind to slow and calm her, but ran up against a wall of pain, confusion, and helplessness that brought her up short. By the time she regained herself, the woman was out the door. Frowning, she followed and stepped out into the hall in time to see the woman disappear through a door marked Emergency Exit at the back of the building.

Hesitating, Beth glanced briefly up the hall toward the dance floor, but then turned to follow the woman’s path to the other end of the hall and the waiting door. She couldn’t help herself. She recognized all those feelings the woman was experiencing. Fear, pain, helplessness . . . Beth had suffered them often enough when she was young. She knew how debilitating they were, and wanted to help her. If she could.

The emergency exit led to an alley, Beth discovered when she pushed through it. A long, dark alley with boarded windows and large metal garbage bins on one side, she noted as she sought out the source of the fast tap, tap, tap of fleeing high heels. The woman was already halfway up the alley. Beth hesitated again, glancing back to the closing door. The men had no idea where she was and—Her thoughts died abruptly when a loud cry from the woman made Beth turn back toward her. She had stopped at the midway point and was hunched over, sobbing violently.

Mouth tightening, Beth started forward. She would just find out what was wrong. There was a chance she could help, but at the very least, she could slip into her mind and calm and soothe her. The woman had stopped just this side of the metal bins, but as Beth neared her, she suddenly scuttled forward, halfway into the shadows cast by the bins. There she dropped into a squat.

Reaching her, Beth hesitated, but then dropped into a squat as well. Before she could reach for the crying woman, however, a thunk overhead made her glance up sharply. She stared blankly at the sword embedded in the boarded-up window above. Had she not dropped when she had, it would have been in her neck right now, she realized as she sought out its owner in the shadows just past the crying woman. All Beth saw was a dark-clad figure holding the sword in a two-handed grip, and then the sword was pulled free, and her survival instinct kicked in.

Jerking upright with a curse, she grabbed for the sword and the figure in the darkness at the same time. Her right hand went for the assailant’s throat, nails digging into the skin with vicious intent. With her left, she caught the sword and gripped it, ignoring the pain as it sliced into her skin.

“Beth!”

Startled by the sound of her name, Beth glanced over her shoulder to see Scotty standing in the open club door, concern on his face. That momentary distraction cost her. She didn’t see her attacker remove one hand from the sword, and only realized it happened when she was punched in the kidneys.

Gasping in surprised pain, Beth lost her grip on the sword and stepped back, but then instinctively moved her arm up to block the sword as she heard it singing toward her again. Pain immediately sliced through her, radiating out from her arm as she stumbled and leaned back from the blade, trying to get her neck as far from it as possible in case her arm was lobbed off and the sword’s momentum carried it into her neck. Fortunately that didn’t happen, although the sword did dig deep. Her lower arm and hand were still attached when the sword pulled away, but just barely. Beth was pretty sure the sword had cut most of the way through the bone before being stopped, and she instinctively wrapped her hand around the wound as she glanced around to see the attacker racing away up the alley. Her gaze narrowed on the dark figure moving faster than a mortal could.

The thud of new footsteps heralded Scotty’s arrival, and she turned to face him as she squeezed her hand tighter around her wound, trying to keep it closed. The more blood she kept from dripping out, the more blood the nanos had to work with until she could get to the supply in the SUV.

“Here.” Scotty wrenched the tail of his linen shirt out of his black leather pants and quickly tore a strip off the bottom.

Beth watched silently as he quickly and efficiently bound the wound. The man had obviously done a lot of that, she thought wryly. But then, most hunters had.

“What happened?” he asked as he tied off the makeshift bandage.

Beth shook her head helplessly. “I was in the bathroom and heard a girl crying.”

“Your attacker was a woman?” he asked with surprise.

“No,” she said and then shrugged. “I don’t know. The person was super tall, wearing a dark suit, and had wide shoulders, so no, probably not,” she added on a sigh and then gestured toward the ground behind Scotty and concluded, “She was the woman I heard crying.”

Scotty turned and stepped to the side as he noted the woman huddled on the ground at their feet, still sobbing.

“She was hurting and weeping, and I followed her to see if I could help,” Beth said and quickly explained what had followed.

“So, she was bait,” Scotty murmured, peering at the woman.

They were both silent for a minute, both concentrating on the woman’s thoughts, and then Beth gave up and admitted, “I’m not getting anything. You?”

Scotty shook his head. “She was obviously controlled, but her thoughts are so scrambled . . .”

“Yeah, it’s like someone put an eggbeater in there,” Beth said softly, and then sighed. “We can’t leave her like this.”

“Nay,” Scotty agreed, running one hand wearily through his hair.

“I can’t go back inside covered in blood,” Beth pointed out. “You go on in and fetch the boys, and I’ll take her to the SUV.”

“Nay,” Scotty said firmly. “I’ll walk ye both to the SUV and call Matias and Donny on the way. Yer attacker might be hanging about, waiting for me to leave.”

Beth opened her mouth to argue, and then shrugged and closed it again. He was right, of course. Her attacker might still be around, and she was in no shape to take him on now.

Scotty urged the woman to her feet with a hand on her arm. He must have taken control of her mind then because she accompanied them without protest or question.

“You’d best text rather than call,” Beth murmured when he started to punch in numbers on the phone. “They won’t be able to hear you over the music anyway.”

“Right,” Scotty grunted and quickly typed out a message. He’d finished sending them both texts by the time they reached the mouth of the alley. The men were swift to respond, and both Matias and Donny caught up to them before they’d reached the vehicle parked a block away from the dance club.

Beth left the explanations to Scotty, her own mind on the attack. It had obviously been planned, the girl used as bait for a direct attempt on her life, but that left the question of how this person had known she would be there to attack. Had she and the others been followed from the Enforcer house to the club? Or had she even been a specific target? It was possible her attacker had just been out to kill any immortal he came across, and came across her.

“Mortimer gave me an address to take the girl to. He says we have people there who can help her,” Donny announced as they reached the SUV.

Beth glanced to him with surprise. She’d been so lost in thought, she hadn’t realized Scotty had finished the explanations and the younger immortal had called Mortimer.

“We’ll take you back to the house first,” Donny assured her. “And then Matias and I can take the girl—”

“Don’t be silly. I’m fine,” Beth said quietly. “Besides, there’s blood in the SUV. Isn’t there?” she added, glancing to Matias in question.

Her cousin nodded solemnly. “Always.”

“I’ll grab a couple bags,” Donny said, moving to the back of the vehicle.

“Make it four,” Scotty ordered, ushering Beth and the girl into the back seat. The other man must have stopped and glanced to him in question, because he added, “The sword cut nearly through the bone. Two bags won’t do.”

“Right,” Donny muttered weakly.

“The lad needs to toughen up if he really wants to be a Rogue Hunter,” Scotty said quietly as he slid into the back seat next to Beth.

“He’s fine. This is only his second day on the job,” she pointed out. “Actually, technically this is still his first. At least, it’s his first twenty-four hours.”

Scotty grunted at that and lifted his arm to set it along the seat back behind her so that there was more room and he could turn to look at her. He asked, “How is your arm?”

Beth raised her eyebrows at the concern on his face, and admitted, “It hurts like a bugger, but I’ve had worse.”

That made Scotty’s mouth tighten, and then Donny closed the back door of the SUV and came around to give him the four bags of blood before getting into the front passenger seat.

“Where to?” Matias asked as he started the engine.

“The house,” Scotty said firmly. “Beth needs to rest and heal.”

“But what about the girl?” Donny asked with a frown. “Mortimer gave me an address to take her to. He said that they’d tend to her there, make sure there was no damage and retrieve any information they can.”

Scotty scowled briefly, but then asked, “What’s the address?”

Donny glanced down at his phone and rattled it off.

“That’s on the way to the house,” Matias said helpfully.

Scotty considered the matter briefly and then nodded as he handed one of the bags of blood to Beth. “Since it’s on the way, we’ll drop off the lass ere we go home. That way none o’ us has to leave the house. I’d rather all three o’ us were there to watch out for Elizabeth tonight. At least until we sort out how best to keep an eye on her from now on.”

“What?” Beth had been about to pop the bag of blood he’d given her to her fangs, but instead turned on him with surprise as Matias steered the SUV into traffic. “Why? I’m fine. A couple of bags of blood and a bit of time and I’ll be good as new. And what’s with the Elizabeth thing? I’m Beth. Everyone calls me Beth.”

“Beth,” he said with emphasis, “someone has targeted ye. Ye were deliberately lured out into that alley, and ’tis an immortal.”

“Yes, but—”

“And this is no’ even the first attack,” Scotty continued right over her.

“What are you talking about?” she asked with amazement.

“The car crash ere we left,” Scotty reminded her sharply.

“That was an accident,” she said at once.

“Nay,” he assured her. “When I read his mind, the driver did no’ remember a thing.”

“Perhaps he—”

“He was controlled.” Scotty’s expression didn’t hold a bit of doubt as he made that statement.

“What accident?” Matias asked, glancing at her in the rearview mirror.

“A semi hauling girders swerved in front of me on the highway,” Beth admitted with a frown. “But I wasn’t even hurt.”

“Ye should ha’e been,” Scotty said with certainty. “Ye should ha’e been beheaded, and then burned to death in an explosion. I still do no’ understand how that Explorer o’ yers did no’ blow up. The weight of the girders landed on your engine when the semi’s tires blew.”

Beth glanced down at her injured arm, but her mind was on the accident back in Toronto. She’d just started to try to read the driver’s mind when she’d heard Donny’s and Scotty’s voices and had stopped to look around. Still, in the brief glimpse she’d had into the driver’s mind, she’d noted the blank spot where his memory of swerving should have been. She’d wondered about that herself, but had just assumed the man had been so traumatized he’d blocked it from his thoughts. But Scotty was saying there had been nothing to find, and suggesting it had also been a deliberate attack and the man had been controlled . . . like the girl tonight.

“My cousin is a wonderful woman. Who would want to kill her?” Matias asked with outrage.

Beth grimaced and admitted, “Probably a lot of people.”

“What?” Matias met her gaze angrily in the rearview mirror. “Do not be ridiculous.”

Beth offered his reflection a crooked smile. “I hunt down rogue immortals, Matias,” she pointed out gently. “Most of them have families. Sometimes the family understands and knows it has to be done. But other times they’re in denial, grief turns to anger, and they want revenge.”

Scotty nodded solemnly. “Family members seeking revenge can be more dangerous than the rogues themselves. At least when ye’re hunting a rogue ye ken ye’re walking into a dangerous situation and are prepared for it. Revenge attacks are unexpected and can be deadly because o’ that. I’ve lost good hunters to relatives seeking revenge.”

“Huh,” Donny said with a frown. “Nobody mentioned that to me when I was in training.”

“They’re too busy trying to teach you how to stay alive,” Beth said with a wry smile.

“This is the address,” Matias said as he slowed to turn into the driveway of a neat white house with a wraparound porch.

“Do you want me to—?” Donny started.

“Nay,” Scotty said at once. “I’ve been controlling the lass since we left the club. I’ll take her to the door. Ye lads keep an eye out for trouble, and you,” he added, turning to Beth, “stop talking and get some blood in ye. Ye’re pale as death.”

Beth grimaced and lifted the bag of blood he’d given her earlier. When he then waited, she dutifully popped it to her fangs.

Nodding with satisfaction, Scotty set the other bags in her lap and then slid out of the vehicle. A moment later, he opened the door next to the mortal and she got out.

“I told you Scotty likes you,” Matias teased as they watched the Scot walk the girl to the porch.

Unable to talk, Beth merely grunted and glared at her cousin over the bag at her mouth. He was talking like a twelve-year-old mortal boy, and doing so mostly to annoy her, she was sure.

“No, Matias is right,” Donny said as if she’d spoken her thoughts out loud. “I know you don’t think so, but Scotty worries about you way too much for anyone to believe he doesn’t like you.”

Beth rolled her eyes as she waited for the last of the blood to be drained. She then ripped the bag away with relief and said, “Now you’re both being ridiculous. You make it sound like he has a teenage crush on me.”

“Perhaps he does,” Matias said with amusement as they watched the front door of the house open. “And why not? I had a teenage crush on you.”

“When you were a teenager,” she agreed dryly. “Scotty is over eight hundred years old, not a horny teenager.”

“My mother and father are both well over a millennium old, and they often act like horny teenagers,” Matias assured her with a grin.

“Because they are life mates. All immortals act like horny teenagers when they’re mated,” Beth said with exasperation. “Scotty and I are not life mates.”

“This time, she’s the one who is right,” Donny said almost apologetically to Matias. “Scotty has a life mate. He told me about her on the plane. She’s too young for him to claim yet.”

“Hmm.” Matias didn’t sound pleased at this revelation.

Beth merely grimaced. She’d been surprised at learning this on the plane while listening to the men talk, but hadn’t really considered it since, and didn’t want to either. The man was a hunk of sexy manhood, but usually too annoying for words. At least, he had been in the past. It had allowed her to use him in her sexual fantasies without guilt. At least there, she had been able to keep him from talking. But his suddenly being nice on this trip was just confusing her, and his having found his life mate left her conflicted.

It didn’t seem right to use a mated man to find sexual release. It might be only in her mind that she was doing the wild thing with Scotty, but any immortal older than her could read those fantasies from her mind, tell his life mate and make things incredibly awkward. Heck, now that she thought about it, Scotty could have read them from her mind anytime they’d met over the last hundred-plus years . . . and wouldn’t that have been embarrassing? Fortunately, she was usually so annoyed with the man when he was near that those nighttime fantasies were far away from her thoughts.

“Are you sure he—” Matias began, but paused when the door next to Beth opened.

“Ye’ve only had one bag?” Scotty asked with disbelief as he slid back in next to her and saw the three untouched bags still in her lap.

Rather than respond, Beth simply popped another bag to her fangs and slid over to make more room between them now that the mortal was gone. It didn’t help much. Scotty simply seemed to expand to fill the space.

“Is the pain worse? Has the healing at least started?” he asked as Matias backed out of the driveway.

Beth nodded silently. Healing always hurt worse than the actual wound. She had no idea why. Someone had once suggested that the nerves went numb after the initial injury, but were brought back to screaming life by the activity of the nanos making their repairs. Whatever the case, there was no doubt she was healing, because her arm was now throbbing with pain.

“Are we still going to have pizza?” Donny asked as they drove through the night.

, I will order it as soon as we get home,” Matias promised.

“Give me the number, and I’ll order right now,” Donny said, pulling his phone out again.

Beth leaned her head back and closed her eyes, trying to focus on something other than the pain as Matias rattled off a phone number, and then Donny made the call. She heard him ask what she liked on her pizza, but couldn’t be bothered to answer. It was taking all of her concentration to keep from screaming. Her arm felt like it was full of fire ants or burning porcupine quills. That was the best way she could describe the pain, and even that didn’t touch on the severity of it. Fortunately, Matias knew what she liked and answered for her. Not that she was feeling anything as mundane as hunger at that point. However, she would be once the worst of the healing was over, she knew.

Beth was just finishing the fourth bag of blood when they reached the house. Her arm was still only partially healed and the pain was kicking her ass. When she stumbled getting out of the SUV, Scotty was immediately there to steady her. After one look at her expression and the sweat on her brow, he scooped her into his arms and carried her quickly into the house.

“Do ye have any first aid supplies here?” Scotty asked as he set her on the couch in the living room.

, in the outbuilding. But I do not know what they have. I will show you, though. I have to go fetch the dogs anyway.”

Nodding, Scotty straightened and followed the man from the room, barking, “Do no’ leave her side, Donny. And stay alert.”

Donny nodded and, as soon as the pair were out of earshot, said to Beth, “See, he does like you.”

Beth just closed her eyes and shook her head. At that moment, she didn’t care what Scotty thought. As much as she lusted after the man, he could prance around naked and, in that moment, she wouldn’t even have bothered to open her eyes to see it.

“But why is he after first aid supplies?” Donny asked. “The bleeding was stopped before we got in the SUV and the wound’s mostly closed now. At least on the outside.”

“He probably meant drugs,” Beth said through clenched teeth, and then frowned at her own words. She didn’t want drugs. Hunters suffered the healing of injuries without complaint or drugs. It was a point of pride. Besides, she liked to remain in control of her mind and body and had no desire to be knocked out.

Holding herself stiffly against the pain, Beth got abruptly to her feet, relieved when she managed to do so without crying out or falling over.

“What are you doing?” Donny asked, jumping up with alarm.

“I am going to the bathroom,” she answered grimly.

“The bathroom?” He looked dismayed. “But I’m not supposed to leave your side.”

“Well, that could be interesting, then, couldn’t it?” she asked caustically, and headed out of the room.

“I’ll just wait outside the door for you,” Donny decided as he followed.

Beth didn’t bother to respond.

They’d had a quick tour of the house before leaving. She’d even moved her bags to the room she was to occupy. Well, most of them. One of her bags was still in the bathroom from when she’d prepared to head out to the bar that night . . . which was kind of rude, really, she supposed. It was a communal bathroom, after all. The only room with an en suite bathroom in this house was the master bedroom that Matias was occupying. That meant she, Donny, and Scotty would share the bathroom she was now entering.

Too bad for them, Beth thought dryly as she closed the bathroom door in Donny’s face, and then locked it. She wasn’t coming out until the worst of the healing was over.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Leslie North, C.M. Steele, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Jenika Snow, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

What He Confides (What He Wants, Book Twenty-Four) by Hannah Ford

Something Like Happy by Eva Woods

Dragon Rebel (Immortal Dragons Book 4) by Ophelia Bell

Rescue (Ransom Book 5) by Rachel Schurig

The Secret Ingredient for a Happy Marriage by Shirley Jump

Chasing His Puma (Big Bad Bunnies Book 3) by Golden Angel

Relentless: A Cyn and Raphael Novella (Vampires in America 11.5) by D. B. Reynolds

Best Love by Morton, Lily

Pretty Little Killers (The Keepers Book 1) by Rita Herron

ZEKE (LOST CREEK SHIFTERS NOVELLAS Book 6) by Samantha Leal

Forbidden by Connelly, Clare

Dangerous: Made & Broken (A British Bad Boy Romance) by Nora Ash

Ares (Olympia Alien Mail Order Brides Book 2) by K. Cantrell

The Billionaire's Double Surrogate: A Billionaire Pregnancy Romance by CJ Howard

Rescue Me: A Bad Boy Romance by Ford, Mia

The Runner's Daughter (B*stards of Corruption Book 2) by Jessica McCrory

Her Claim: Legally Bound Book 2 by Rebecca Grace Allen

Playing Defense (A Dallas Demons Hockey Romance) by Aven Ellis

The Capture by Adrienne Giordano

Reno Runaway: Bad Boy & Virgin Romance (Nevada Bad Boys Book 3) by Kelli Callahan