Free Read Novels Online Home

Dragon VIP: Pyrochlore (7 Virgin Brides for 7 Weredragon Billionaires Book 3) by Starla Night (25)

Chapter Twenty-Six

Where was Pyro?

Amy angled her phone under the teacher’s desk and surreptitiously checked her screen. Nothing. She shut it off, fighting the urge to immediately look at the screen again. Her kids were going to notice.

How long did it take to pick up a bag? Pyro had been in her apartment for half a class period at least.

A dark shadow passed her window.

Finally!

She jumped up. Pyro knew better than to come onto campus, so something must have

Wait. Shadows seemed to pull closer to the hulking shape even in broad daylight… It wasn’t Pyro outside her window.

Dread filled her stomach.

Some readers looked up.

She told them, “I’ll be right back. Keep reading,” and headed to the courtyard where Kyan landed.

“What happened?” she demanded. “Where’s Pyro?”

The scarred dragon shifter didn’t mince his words. “You tell me.”

“You don’t know?”

He turned away.

She grabbed him, stopping him. “Kyan! Is he okay?”

“Why do you care?”

Anger warred with her fear. She released him and crossed her arms. “Pyro said you don’t dislike me, but when you ask a question like that, I have a hard time believing it.”

He blinked. “How should I ask?”

Was he actually trying not to be rude? She sucked in a deep breath. “Well, he’s my husband. Of course I care. Why even ask?”

“You told Pyro many times you didn’t want to see him. It caused him hurt. Why change your mind?”

“Because I love him.”

He stared at her like he didn’t know the meaning of her phrase.

Whatever. That was her reason. She grilled him. “What do you know?”

“His last known location was your apartment.”

“He was picking up my bag.” She bit her lip. Something was wrong; if Kyan thought so too, then she needed to find Pyro. Now. “What do you mean, his ‘last known location’?”

“The tracker in his cell phone became non-functional.” He waited for a beat, and then added, “As did the tracker embedded behind his jaw.”

“Behind his — what?”

The teacher from the classroom next to hers exited the building. “Amy, what’s this? Who’s that — and where is his guest pass?”

“It’s an emergency.” She lifted her arms.

Kyan stared at her. “What?”

“Take me with you.”

His gaze narrowed.

“What?” the other teacher said.

“My husband’s missing,” she told the teacher over her shoulder. “Can you watch my class?”

“Certainly. But who is this?”

She ignored the teacher and returned to Kyan, who was still regarding her with disagreement. “You’re going back to my apartment, aren’t you? To investigate? It’s my apartment so I might notice things you don’t.”

He acquiesced, lifting her into the air to the teacher’s shocked gasp.

“Thank you!” she called out to the teacher.

They flew across the city.

She peppered him with questions as they traveled. “Did you contact everyone? His siblings? Sard?”

“I have only just become aware of the issue.”

Was it her, or did he growl like she was telling him his job? Whatever. In this case, it seemed justified. “What about his other friend? The guy he’s always getting a drink with.”

“Darcy.” Kyan held a phone to his ear. “I am with Pyro’s wife. Is Pyro there? … He is. Good. We will join you. … He was? When did he leave? … Your answers are unsatisfying. Speak more concisely and less human.”

“Oh, give me that.” She took the phone. “Hi, is this Pyro’s friend that always got a drink at the bar next to the art school?”

A slight hesitation, and then a pleasant male voice said, “It is. Are you Amy? Don’t worry about a thing. Pyro was here a minute ago. Whatever he’s late for, I’m sure he’ll get there soon.”

Her teacher-honed BS meter pinged. “Are you covering for him?”

“No,” Darcy said smoothly, a salesman’s smile clearly audible in his voice. “He’s on his way.”

“We think he’s in real trouble,” she said. “If you’re lying, it’s only going to delay us from calling the police.”

Darcy was silent for a moment. “Does Kyan believe he’s in trouble?”

She glanced at the stone-faced security officer. “Kyan is the one who came to me.”

Darcy sighed. “I haven’t seen Pyro all week.”

Kyan’s jaw clenched.

“Thank you for your honesty,” she said. “We’ll contact you when we know more.”

“Amy. You shouldn’t worry. This happens all the time.”

“What happens?”

“Pyro up and leaves. It’s his way of blowing off steam. Give him space. He’ll come back when he’s ready.”

No. That was untrue.

Looking at the facts, Pyro had disappeared on her suddenly three times. But each time, he’d done so with good intentions.

He’d abandoned her fighting his way out of Sard’s warehouse but had intended to carry her to safety too. He’d abandoned her on her wedding morning to meet with Sard and save his company. And he’d abandoned her in Turkey only after making sure she’d have a ride back home and because he’d been clearing his record.

Responsible. Faithful. Dedicated.

“You don’t know,” she said finally. “It’s unlike Pyro to drop out of contact like this.”

“Most wouldn’t say that.”

“What do you mean?”

“Pyro drops out of contact all the time.”

She gritted her teeth and squinted into the wind. “Not when it matters. And not with me.”

Kyan glanced at her. Darcy, while still clearly believing Pyro was fine, asked for an update when she found him and hung up.

They landed on her steps and she led Kyan up to the apartment. The door hung ajar.

“He said he was going to close it.” She entered the apartment.

Kyan followed silently.

Things looked normal. A couple of her clothing stacks had fallen over, but they weren’t perfectly balanced.

In the kitchen, her book bag spilled across on the linoleum. She scooped it up. “He was definitely here.”

“How do you know?”

“This is what he came here for. It was hanging on the back of the chair.” She pointed across the kitchen. No way it could tumble so far naturally.

Kyan touched his ear. A near-invisible ear bud blinked subtle yellow. “Widen the search. Covert. Notify Amber.”

Amy rose and searched the apartment for clues. The door to Melody’s room was also ajar. She normally shut it after she left. Amy started toward Melody’s room.

Her phone buzzed stopping her. A text from her mom read, “Come over right away.”

Ominous.

Instead of replying by text, Amy opened her phone app and called. “Do you have information about Pyro?”

Her mother hesitated an instant. “Yes.”

“Is he there with you?” There was a small, strange possibility that he had suddenly gotten the urge to patch up his reputation with her parents instead of bringing her book bag. It was possible. “Is he okay?”

“Come over. I’ll tell you everything.”

She looked at Kyan. “I’ll be there in five minutes.”

Hanging up on her mother’s flustered response, she opened the balcony door, left it unlocked for an easy return, and Kyan flew her the short hop to her parents’ house without directions. Meaning, he knew where it was.

At the moment, she was grateful he knew what he was doing.

She settled on the doorstep and knocked.

Her mother answered the door, surprise changing to concern. “Five minutes! You weren’t kidding. Who’s this?”

“Pyro’s brother.” She pushed past her mother, into the house. Kyan moved lithely behind her. “Where is he?”

Her mother shrank back. “Not here.”

“But you know where he is?”

She lifted her chin. “Amy, we have to talk.”

So, no, she didn’t. A wasted trip. Amy looked at Kyan with a subtle shake of her head. “I’m sorry, Mom. We’re in the middle of something.”

Her mother sharpened her tone. “Sit down.”

“Mom—”

Now.”

Okay. She didn’t have any ideas. Maybe a frank conversation with her mom would give her some.

She looked at Kyan. “Will you check with Sard?”

“I’ll contact you.” He ducked out the front door and disappeared.

Amy closed the front door and faced her mother.

Her mother’s back was turned as she arranged pillows on the couch. “I thought you had class today.”

“I do.”

“Sit.”

Amy obediently took a seat on the couch. But she left her shoes on.

Her mother stared at her shoes and then raised her voice. “Barry? Amy’s here.”

“Already?” His voice grew louder as he meandered down the hall from his den. “I thought she had class.”

“I left,” she said shortly. “Pyro’s in trouble.”

Her mom looked at her dad.

He sighed, knelt, and took her hand. “Someone like that will always be in trouble.”

She jerked her hand free and stood. “You don’t know.”

Her father looked up at her, older suddenly than he had seemed. “Yes, we do. Don’t we, Fiona?”

Her mother nodded. “Amy. Take a seat.”

She sank onto the edge of the couch, crossed her arms, and one leg over her knee. Kyan would call her as soon as he found Pyro. She had a few minutes to sit.

Her dad rose and stood beside her mother. Just like he always did when Amy was in trouble. Two against one. The wall.

Her mother started. “The truth is, Amy, we don’t just say ‘one decision will ruin your life’ lightly. Your father used to be in an Irish gang.”

She looked at her mild-mannered, self-effacing, quiet father. “Excuse me?”

“In Boston,” he said. “In the 70s.”

“Uh… But we’re not Irish.”

Her parents looked at each other and smiled.

Her mom told her, “We are, actually.”

“Our last name is Adamson.”

“The FBI agent chose that when we went into the Witness Protection Program. I’m Rourke and he’s O’Shaughnessy.”

She had no idea what to say. Her parents were making a joke. Telling her this bizarre crazy story to use as leverage to convince her not to stay married to Pyro.

“I was bartending at the pub,” her mother said. “He drove out to Vegas with the bosses for the weekend and, because my family was against it, I met him there secretly and we married. On the way back to tell the news, we drove up in time to see his bosses gunned down, right in front of us. We were the only witnesses.”

“That night in the motel room, your mom found out she was pregnant with you,” her father added. “It changed everything. So, on the advice of my brother, we went to the FBI.”

“Are you actually serious?” Amy rubbed her head. “I thought you were an only child. You’re both only children.”

“I’ve got four brothers and your mother has six. There’s a whole passel of cousins back in Boston. Your great grandad’s still alive.” He shook his head. “He never wanted me to go to Vegas.”

“And your grandparents always warned me to stay away from that reprobate.”

Amy shook her head. “I can’t. This makes no sense. Why tell me now? After twenty-six years?”

“The leader of the other gang died in prison six weeks ago. We contacted our families and are heading home for a visit this summer. We’ve been meaning to tell you but you’ve been so busy.”

This was just the last thing she’d ever expected. “Basically everything you ever told me was a lie.”

“No.” Her mother held her father’s hand. “We got out of the life to make a life a for you. And you’ve done such wonderful things that it’s clear we made the right decision. So we don’t want you to lose focus just before you reach your ideals.”

“One bad decision can ruin your life,” her father said.

She goggled at him. “Joining an Irish gang? Bartending and dating a gang member? I think there was more than ‘one’ bad decision.”

“Hey,” her mother said sharply. “Watch it.”

Kyan knocked on the door and poked his head in. “Someone’s entered your apartment.”

She didn’t want to know how he knew that.

Amy rose and started for him. “Who?”

“A female.”

Probably Melody. But maybe her roommate knew something. And anyway this shocking conversation was done. “I’m ready to go.”

Her parents followed her to the front porch.

“Amy, this is the bad decision I’m talking about.”

Her father added, “We learned our lesson so you don’t have to learn yours.”

“Okay, then here’s another lesson.” She pointed to her parents. “You met in a bar and married in Las Vegas. Obviously, it worked out.”

“We lost touch with our families. We lost our very identities. For decades.”

“Well, I’m not in any danger of that.” She twined her arms around Kyan’s bulky neck for the flight. “I’m showing up for Sunday dinner with Pyro. And you’ll see.”

“Amy! What’s wrong with his hand?”

She glanced over her shoulder. Kyan’s hand was covered in gray-blue scales like he’d been in a dragon fight and forgotten to shift back. He flexed, and the scales receded into his skin.

Her parents stared with confusion.

Okay, so Pyro’s true identity would come out now. “He’s a dragon shifter. And a billionaire. Sorry.”

Her parents both looked stunned.

“You’re joking,” her father said.

“No. You should know better than anybody that not everyone is as they appear.”

She tapped Kyan’s shoulder to go. He lifted them off the front step, navigated the eaves, and rocketed across the city to search for the male she needed more than anything to be alright.

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, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Sloane Meyers, Delilah Devlin, Penny Wylder, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Hero's Heart (A Second Chance Romance Book 1) by Lila Felix, Elle Kimberly

Craved: A Science Fiction Adventure Romance (Star Breed Book 5) by Elin Wyn

Patriarch (Everglade Brides Book 6) by Ava Benton

Dare To Love Series: I Do Dare (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Yvette Hines

All Rights Reserved by Gregory Scott Katsoulis

His Biggest Secret: An Mpreg Romance (M/M Non-Shifter Omegaverse) by Xander Collins

Winterland Daddies (Second Chance Ranch Book 1) by Rayanna Jamison

Second Chance Mountain Man by Frankie Love

SECRETS Vol. 4 by H. M. Ward, Ella Steele

Rough Rider by B.J. Daniels

The Russian's Proposal - Final by Elizabeth Lennox

Holding on Tighter (A Wicked Lovers Novel) by Shayla Black

His Temptation by Amber Bardan

More than Roommates by Jillian Quinn

Vadir: Star-Crossed Alien Mail Order Brides (Intergalactic Dating Agency) by Susan Hayes

Rush by C.E. Vescio

In Flight (Up in the Air Book 1) by R.K. Lilley

Royal Engagement by Chance Carter

SAVING HIS PRINCESS (DRAGONS FURY MC Book 1) by M.T. Ossler

Blank Space (Dirty South Book 1) by Alla Kar