Phantom in the Night

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Phantom in the Night Page 11

by Sherrilyn Kenyon


  "How long have you been on this case?" he asked.

  "A month."

  "What's your objective?"

  "I can't share those details with you."

  "Let me guess. You're trying to nail Marseaux." He had a feeling she was up to much more than that but she wasn't going to tell him.

  "Maybe."

  He admired her stubborn tenacity in light of the position he had her in. "In my case, this situation goes back to a long time ago, long before you got involved. Long before you probably heard his name the first time. I will find Marseaux and make him pay for what he's done. You'll just get in the way if you don't back down and stay away."

  You'll just get in the way? Terri gripped the sheets as bitter memories tore through her. Why hadn't he added "little missy" to the end of that condescending comment?

  Aching pain bit her hard as she remembered her poor mother, who'd paid the ultimate price for being in the way…

  This asshole couldn't have made her any madder had he tried. She didn't have to play nice with this guy and she wasn't about to. "I'm done with talking to you until you're ready to talk to me face-to-face. In the meantime, get off me and stay away from me."

  "You'll be taking a huge risk to stay on this case and I may not be around to protect you the next time."

  Like she needed his help? "I might ensure you aren't around next time by shooting you now if you don't get off me this minute." She kicked her feet a couple times. One day, she would get him back and be the one on top.

  "You don't want to shoot me."

  She heard the smile in his voice. Hadn't helped himself then at all.

  "Oh, yes I do," she said from between gritted teeth.

  "You'd regret it."

  "Why?"

  "Because." His body lowered closer. "I couldn't do this."

  She held her breath, wondering what he couldn't do.

  He didn't move another muscle for a moment and the anticipation threatened to kill her. What was he waiting on?

  Her. He waited to see if he'd frightened her. More curious than anything, Terri stayed perfectly still.

  Then he kissed her shoulder and ran his lips along her skin, exploding heat missiles everywhere he touched her. A woman in her right mind would demand that he stop, right now, and leave, but she hadn't been in her right mind since the first time they'd met.

  He moved to her neck and she couldn't will herself to do anything but lie there, indulging in this moment of pure pleasure.

  If anyone from BAD found out about this she'd be toast.

  His fingers brushed across her shoulders and she shivered. Heat coiled, twisted and churned low, wanting this man to do so much more than caress her neck.

  He was truly a thief, stealing kisses in the dark and making her ache to feel him inside her. She hadn't been with a man for… too long to recall.

  A deep inhale of breath shuddered its way out of her lungs. Just when a lick of common sense was about to return so she could find the power to make him leave, he whispered in her ear, "You're so beautiful."

  In that case, she could suffer through another couple seconds.

  He nuzzled her hair, kissed the bump on her head, then said, "Sorry."

  Manners were nice. He apologized for being so forward.

  His body lifted off her.

  Terri started to rise and turn, but the towel around her jerked loose and floated down over her bottom.

  "Hey!" she yelped, Terri grabbed for the terry cloth material, "What are you doing?"

  "Ensuring you don't move until I'm gone. Back off this case before you get hurt."

  * * *

  Nathan withdrew from the room into the dark hallway and lifted the hood over his head as he slipped down the hall. He was out of the house before she could have gotten off the bed and pulled the towel around her. As if he wasn't hard enough from lying over her, he'd jerked the towel harder than he'd intended and exposed her entire backside.

  Staying another minute after that would have killed him.

  She'd let him kiss her skin. He didn't know what had possessed him to take that liberty. She should have cursed him and threatened to use her gun on him again, not… purr.

  He was on the road to losing his mind and wanting her would drive him mad that much quicker.

  Nathan hugged the shadows until he passed another house. He moved to the sidewalk and casually strolled along, hands in pockets. The oversize hood kept his face as shrouded as the Grim Reaper's.

  At the first cross street, a disturbance on his left drew his attention. Some thug was talking to a little old woman and she didn't look happy. She backed up a step.

  Not just a thug, a mugger.

  Nathan quietly moved in her direction.

  * * *

  A steady tapping disturbed Fra Bacchus from a most enjoyable nap where a female discipul had been serving him in a reverent position… upon her knees. He straightened up from where he'd fallen asleep, slumped over in his chair again.

  Tap, tap, tap.

  Who dared to interrupt his evening repast with his favorite glass of merlot? He missed the days of using a leather whip on those who crossed a fra.

  Now he only used one for pleasure.

  "What is it?" he snapped, brushing his fine hair into place with his hands.

  The door opened a fraction. "Fra Bacchus?" Linette inquired in a voice created by angels.

  "Yes, child." He smiled to himself over the reference. A twenty-six-year-old woman whose best assets filled a double-D cup bra was no child.

  "Consul Vestavia says it's important he meet with you." Her face was an Italian masterpiece of dark brown eyes, thick lashes and full lips, the smooth canvas framed by long black hair. A descendant of Roman bloodlines that ran all the way back to Constantine, she'd been trained from day one to serve a higher purpose with the Fratelli de il Sovrano—Brotherhood of the Sovereign, the rulers. Only the purest were chosen to serve his rank.

  Bacchus had taken over her training when she'd been brought covertly to him at eighteen. She'd served him and the order well once he'd brought her to heel.

  "Have him wait ten minutes, then bring him in," Bacchus said in an understanding tone. He was anything but at the moment.

  He'd just finished removing everything of significance from his desk when Linette tapped again and opened the door. He smiled at her and nodded his approval to allow his visitor entrance.

  Consul Vestavia entered with the arrogant swagger that had rubbed Fra Bacchus wrong from their first meeting. That this man had reached the level of consul showed the lack of intuitive ability of the other eleven fratelli ruling the North and South America province. Vestavia had proven himself worthy time and again—to others—but Bacchus didn't trust the man.

  Maybe it was the rebellious look of scraggly hair, thick beard, black jeans, leather jacket, and gray T-shirt. A bad motorcycle hoodlum cliché. His tinted wire-rimmed glasses didn't fit, either. Everything raised red flags to Bacchus, but to declare as much to the other eleven Fras would be akin to questioning their ability to rule.

  Which he did question, but silently.

  Vestavia eyed the room, probably searching for a camera.

  He'd never find it. The consul insulted Bacchus by thinking his surveillance equipment would be so easy to locate.

  "Thanks for the audience, Fra Bacchus. Good to see you." Vestavia sat down in the leather chair facing the desk.

  "And you." Bacchus leaned back and crossed one arm over the other, sliding his hands inside the wide sleeves of his robe. When in his private quarters, he preferred the ceremonial clothing to the constricting suits. Particularly the easy access allowed by the lap of his robe whenever Linette was close enough to make him hard and he had to shield himself from others also in the area.

  Vestavia eyed the half-empty bottle of wine and the drained glass. His eyes crinkled. "You appear healthy as an ox. Must be true what the doctors say about red wine being good for your heart."

  "Quite true. In fact, i
t has been used medicinally for many years," Bacchus said. If I thought it would cure you of being alive I'd give you a case. "I am pressed for time, so…?"

  "I hate to bring up a distasteful matter, but I believe you have a discipul breaking rules and taking unnecessary lives."

  "I would know if any discipul did not adhere to the rules, I would know if unnecessary lives were being taken. There have been no random deaths." Bacchus belted his anger under control, for now.

  Vestavia smiled, a false expression his eyes failed to support. "You know, I'd be careful not to make the same mistake the Fratelli di Illuminati made when they committed the sin of pride."

  Bacchus gripped his forearms like necks needing to be wrung, his nails biting into his skin until he relaxed. "I would warn you"—he said in slow measured words—"to take care how you speak to me as I am a sixth-generation Fratelli de il Sovrano, a truly illuminated one, and you are merely a consul. Those who have tread too closely to the light in the past have been burned."

  Vestavia stared at him with those empty eyes. The fratelli had erred when they voted to make this man a consul, only one step in power away from becoming a fra. But a ruling position around the table of twelve only came available after a death. All the fratelli had a trusted general, just as Bacchus had Duff. Bacchus had convinced three other fratelli to vote against Vestavia, but in the end the majority had persevered.

  "I'm just pointing out a few potential problems the order might frown on," Vestavia said.

  "Since you brought up the topic of unnecessary deaths, Marseaux is not pleased. Finding a body around the container was sloppy." He tilted his head and let the unspoken accusation fall between them.

  That stirred a reaction in Vestavia, who stiffened in his seat, then relaxed just as quickly. "You're joking, right? I figured you ordered that one. Killing Drake fits into the plan, like all those deaths of innocent villagers in India this week. You know, part of the master plan." He delivered his counterpoint with the precision of a surgeon quickly cutting to the nerve center.

  "Don't overstep your position, consul. You are not worthy of being privy to the master plan and you should well know it. I would remind you the penance for the sin of defiance is severe and painful." Bacchus smiled at the possibility of seeing Vestavia reprimanded. Even better if Bacchus were awarded the honor of inflicting the punishment.

  "Hey, chill out. I'm not defying anyone. I'm one of the fratelli's most faithful followers and humbly beg your pardon for any misunderstanding."

  The lilt in his words raised hairs of suspicion along Bacchus's arms again. "Apology accepted and duly noted." Only because he would not give Vestavia the satisfaction of knowing he'd really annoyed him.

  "Brady is becoming a problem," Vestavia said, changing the subject. "So is the Mitchell woman consulting with the NOPD. She used to work with Brady at the DEA. I think she's with another agency. We should find out which one."

  "I am keeping tabs on Marseaux, the DEA, and the NOPD. Neither Brady nor Mitchell will interfere with our current plans." Bacchus would not share a thing with Vestavia about the current plan with the vials unless the fratelli pressed to include him. A curse on Fra Diablo, head elder of their twelve, who supported Vestavia and led the vote to approve his consul position.

  "How can you be sure those two won't interfere?"

  Bacchus really wanted to order Vestavia shackled for his rude impertinence. "The means don't concern you." He lifted his wrist into view and glanced at his watch. "Unfortunately, I must prepare for another meeting. Go in peace."

  Vestavia stood and walked to the door. He opened it and paused to look over his shoulder at Bacchus. "I'll be back." The door closed silently behind him.

  Bacchus shook with fury. No member of the Fratelli de il Sovrano questioned a fra except an equal, particularly not lippy consuls. Once Vestavia became expendable, Bacchus would make arrangements to remove the man since a fra was the only one who could execute a "necessary death" order.

  He lifted his cell phone and sent a text message to Duff:

  Find out what agency the Mitchell woman is working with. Maybe she's still with the DEA and the consulting is just a scam.

  He received an immediate "As you wish" reply.

  * * *

  Terri wrenched the towel up so that she could cover herself and rolled off the bed. She ran to the door knowing it was a waste of time but checking the hallway all the same.

  He was gone. Again. No name, no idea who he was nor where he'd come from.

  She'd met him while breaking into the same house, had kissed him in a dark container inside a police yard and all but turned to him while he'd straddled her towel-covered body.

  More damning than all of that? She sort of liked this guy She didn't want to, but there it was in black and white.

  And she was sure beyond a doubt he was the phantom interrogator terrorizing Marseaux's contacts.

  Could any woman be more stupid when it came to men?

  The television still played in Grandma's room. Terri pulled on a pair of warmup pants and dug around until finding an oversize green T-shirt she only wore inside the house, which declared in bold white text: IF YOUR GUN IS BIG ENOUGH, I'LL SURRENDER WILLINGLY.

  She toweled her hair dry and walked down the hall to Grandma's room. Good thing Grandma hadn't heard a noise from Terri's room while she'd had a visitor. The poor thing would have had a heart attack had she found an unknown man in her house. Not that Grandma would have seen this guy since she was blind, but that would have just scared her worse.

  Terri tapped on the door, listened, and only heard the television. Had Grandma fallen asleep sitting up again? Terri opened the door.

  No Grandma. Terri's heart jumped. She glanced around, panicked at her first thoughts before she caught her breath.

  Grandma had a bad habit of walking around at night.

  Okay, she was worried about her grandmother, but annoyed, as well.

  Where could Grandma have gone this time? Terri ran to the kitchen where she left a pair of sneakers to slip on for taking out the garbage. She grabbed a flashlight and rushed outside. The last time she'd discovered her missing, Terri had spent four hours walking the neighborhoods only to come home and find Grandma sitting in front of the television, complaining that people sounded stupid on reality shows.

  Grandma might not be so critical if she could do more than listen. She was self-sufficient for a blind woman, but that didn't include being able to defend herself against a threat. Which is why Terri wished to God Grandma would stay inside after dark.

  What is dark to me? Grandma always countered. I like the night, it's peaceful.

  It's dangerous as hell, too. Terri didn't want to limit her grandmother's mobility, but neither did she want to lose the only family she had. Bad things happened at night. People died violent deaths, sometimes by accident.

  A painful lesson both of them knew all too well.

  At the street, Terri looked both ways and did a double take when she glanced down to her left.

  There came Grandma, and a tall man dressed in black pants and a gray sweatshirt with a hood that shielded his face.

  Terri cursed silently over leaving her gun inside the house. She gripped the flashlight like a weapon and headed straight for her grandmother.

  When she got within thirty feet, Terri said, "It's me, Grandma. Are you all right?"

  "I'm fine, dear. Just taking a walk." She said that like there was no danger in the world for a seventy-year-old woman out walking the streets alone.

  Terri kept her eyes on the man, sizing him up as she moved forward slowly. Would he continue walking and close the distance between them or did he have sense enough to back off? If he lacked it, she'd make him regret the mistake once she was between him and her grandmother.

  Her grandmother kept coming toward her in an excruciatingly slow gait. "Some guy tried to mug me over on Ursulines."

  That sent Terri's already furiously pumping pulse into overdrive. She lifted her gaze t
o the man who now slowed his steps, allowing a gap to grow between him and her grandmother.

  "I'll deal with this guy, Grandma. Just go on into the house. Your shows are on."

  Her grandmother stopped, just quit walking right between Terri and the threat. She wanted to scream.

  "Him? He's not the mugger. He ran the mugger off. Well, I'm not sure he ran him off, he might have knocked him out. I just heard some bumping and cursing, then it got quiet."

  Terri blinked, then glanced from her Grandma to the guy, who took another quicker step back, then another.

  "We make a good pair," Grandma said, "I'm blind and he's not." She laughed and walked forward again. "I got tired of hearing all that bad news about India. Shame about all those people, but I guess you're right about walking around at night. It's all the same to me, dark no matter what time it is. I just think it's quieter and less car fumes…" She kept chattering away as the man drifted farther back until he disappeared in the dark.

  When Grandma got close enough, Terri took her arm and guided her toward the house.

  "… but that Drake boy has always been nice to me."

  "What did you say?" Terri stumbled, then recovered and stopped.

  Grandma lifted her sunshade-shielded eyes that were milky orbs beneath the dark lenses and cocked her head. "I said the neighborhood used to be safer back when Lydia was alive. Her boy has always been nice to me."

  "You knew Lydia Drake?" Terri's hands shook. She glanced over her shoulder at the empty sidewalk.

  "A little. I met her when I was out walking and dropped my cane on the sidewalk. Lydia picked it up and asked where I lived, then said she was going back the same way. I talked to her a few times over the years when I walked down her street, that's all. I could tell she was sick, so thin I could feel her bones when she'd let me hold her arm. One of the neighbors took me to the funeral while you were still doing rehab."

  Terri looked back into the darkness where the man had vanished. "So you think that was her son?"

  "It's her son. After he knocked that guy over the head—and I'm pretty sure he knocked him out—he asked me what street I lived on and when I told him he said he'd take me home. That's all he said, but I heard him talking to Lydia sometimes when I was walking past her house. I recognized his voice tonight, but he sounded sadder this time. I told him I was sorry to hear about his momma. He didn't say much after that, just 'thanks,' so I didn't say much to him. Some people can't talk about a death."

 

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