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Blood in the Water (Blood Vice Book 3)

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by Angela Roquet




  BLOOD IN THE WATER

  BLOOD VICE BOOK THREE

  Angela Roquet

  BLOOD IN THE WATER

  Copyright © 2017 by Angela Roquet

  All rights reserved. No part of this book shall be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission of the publisher. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the publisher and author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions. Neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  www.angelaroquet.com

  Cover Art by Rebecca Frank

  For Paul and Xavier,

  who make my world go round.

  by Angela Roquet

  Blood Vice

  Blood Vice

  Blood and Thunder

  Blood in the Water

  Blood Dolls (January 2018)

  Lana Harvey, Reapers Inc.

  Graveyard Shift (FREE on Kindle)

  Pocket Full of Posies

  For the Birds

  Psychopomp

  Death Wish

  Ghost Market

  Hellfire and Brimstone

  Limbo City Lights (short story collection)

  The Illustrated Guide to Limbo City

  Spero Heights

  Blood Moon

  Death at First Sight

  The Midnight District (March 2018)

  other titles

  Crazy Ex-Ghoulfriend

  Backwoods Armageddon

  BLOOD IN THE WATER

  Chapter One

  The formal admission letter for the Blood Authority Training Center in Denver was vague as hell. I had no idea what to pack, and my frayed nerves weren’t helping. Dialing up my diva sister in Hollywood to ask for advice probably hadn’t been the best idea either.

  “Don’t forget moisturizer,” Laura snapped. “That altitude is horrible for your skin. Oh! What about a bathing suit?”

  “It’s boot camp for vamps, not a vacation,” I said.

  “Hey, they might want you to do some swimming exercises. You never know.”

  I snorted and cradled my cell phone between my ear and shoulder so I could rummage through my duffle bag. So far, I was working with underwear, socks, and basic toiletries. The police academy had provided a dress code and gear list. Without that, I had no idea what was expected—and I certainly wasn’t going to call Roman to find out.

  Laura sighed in my ear. “Dumb question, but I’ll ask it anyway. You’re bringing blackout curtains for the hotel you stop at halfway, right?”

  “Of course,” I said a little too quickly, my voice hitching an octave.

  “Don’t even think about asking Max to drive all the way through.”

  “I won’t.”

  “That’s stupid dangerous,” she went on, ignoring me entirely. “If you get into an accident—hell, if you’re involved in a fender bender—you’re up in flames.”

  “I said I won’t, okay?” I huffed and snatched a pen and notepad off my night table, scribbling curtains down on the packing list.

  Above the curtains, Mandy’s chicken scratch detailed a dozen junk food items she’d insisted were essential to any proper road trip. And above that, Collins’ typewriter-perfect print nailed down most of the important stuff: jumper cables, flares, flashlights with fresh batteries, survival blankets, extra water, a bag of oranges, pop-top beans, iron supplements, and a first aid kit. I was betting Collins had already gathered most of this stuff. And he’d probably packed his bags a week ago. At least one of us had it together.

  “How’s filming?” I asked Laura. Her heavy sigh almost made me regret changing the subject.

  “David hired a writer from one of the teenybopper shows. I feel like I’ve been recast as a grandmother.”

  I smirked, feeling slightly smug that I had at least one thing going for me that Laura was jealous of. Eternal youth. In twenty years, she’d be touching up grays and getting Botox. Of course, I couldn’t allow myself to think any further ahead than that. It was too depressing.

  “And I don’t have a single sex scene this season,” Laura continued. She prattled on about the crappy set lighting and the heavy-handed makeup department, while I packed yoga pants and tank tops. I added a few long-sleeved tee shirts, wondering if any of this training would take place outside.

  “So,” I said once Laura ran out of things to complain about. “Are you still happy that you moved back?”

  She huffed. “Yes. The constant sunshine, beaches, and adoring fans make all this crap worthwhile, I suppose. But I do miss you. Mandy even,” she added.

  I grinned. “We miss you, too.”

  We said our goodbyes, and I went to fish my bathing suit out of the back of my closet. Maybe Laura was right about the swimming exercises. Her guess was as good as mine.

  As I hauled my packed duffle bag into the living room, the doorbell rang. Mandy had left earlier in the evening to say goodbye to Serena, but she had a key now. And Collins had a romantic evening planned with his husband for our last night in the city. Vin’s shift at the morgue wasn’t over for a few hours either. I was out of guesses.

  My hand went to the holster at my hip, fingers curling around the grip of my Glock as I neared the front door. After the break-in a few weeks ago, I never went anywhere unarmed—not even within my own home.

  I held my breath as I glanced through the peephole on the front door. Roman Knight stood under the pale glow of the porch light. If not for his alarmingly blue eyes and white hair, I would have second-guessed his presence. He was in jeans and a gray, button-down shirt. His civilian clothes, I realized.

  The last time I’d seen Roman had been at the Duke of House Lilith’s manor in Ladue. That had been a few weeks ago, but it felt like ages. I’d expected him to visit or call me afterward, but when he hadn’t, I suspected he was brooding over the duke admitting me and my blood harem into the training program.

  The shame and wounded pride I felt from our most recent mishap had kept me from reaching out to him. I’d saved his life with my blood. That he’d been ungrateful was a massive understatement.

  The way Roman saw it, I had deprived him of the opportunity to become a vampire fifty years sooner than his contract with Blood Vice stated. I’d strangled him within the one loophole he was allowed. And he hated me for it—a devastating blow to the torch I carried for him.

  If that wasn’t enough to fuel my guilt, Roman had also put his career on the line to keep me from being sentenced to death by the very authority I was prepared to train with. That secret had the potential to end us both now.

  I knew he had hoped I would be easy to sweep under the rug. That I’d be some quiet, good deed he could pat himself on the back for whenever he was forced to slay some other sireless vampling on the duke’s orders. I guess I was just too ambitious to go gentle into that good night.

  The corners of Roman’s mouth drew down as he impatiently pushed the doorbell again, and I noticed a briefcase in his opposite hand. I released my held breath and unlocked the door, pulling it open as if ripping off a bandage.

  We stood there, staring at each other in silence for a long moment. I didn’t know what to say to him, and he was clearly struggling to find words, too.

  “Can I come in?” he finally asked.

  I nodded stiffly and took a step back, opening a path for him. Roman pressed his lips together and took a deep breath through h
is nose before crossing my threshold, his shoulders squared and chin held high. I watched his throat bob as I closed the door behind him.

  The living room felt too casual and intimate, especially with Mandy’s half-folded basket of laundry strewn over the sofa, so I led Roman into the kitchen instead. I waved a hand at the stools along the breakfast bar, silently offering him a seat, before circling the counter and facing him from the opposite side. The buffer seemed to put us both more at ease.

  “What’s the occasion?” I asked, pushing my tangle of blond hair over my shoulder. Roman’s eyes dropped to my chest, and I remembered that I was still wearing the lace-trimmed tank top I’d worn to bed. Sans bra. I folded my arms over my breasts as his eyes darted down at my bare legs, stretching out beneath a pair of cotton shorts. My skin flushed at the attention.

  Roman set his briefcase on the countertop. His thumbs made short work of the combination lock, and the leather box sprang open, revealing several manila envelopes. He removed them and dug a fingernail under the dark lining along the bottom of the case. A hidden compartment popped open, and from it he retrieved a tiny, plastic box containing a micro SD card.

  “Is your cell phone password protected? Are you able to listen to classified files on it?” he asked, sliding the box with the chip across the counter toward me.

  I frowned but gave him a quick nod. “What is this?”

  Roman took another deep breath and blinked up at me. I wondered how long he had been dreading this meeting.

  “Can you tell me your sire’s name?” he asked flatly.

  I felt my cheeks warm, even though I’d been practicing. “Pablo Zajalvo,” I answered.

  “And what do you know about him?”

  “He immigrated to the States from Spain ten years ago.”

  Roman raised an eyebrow. “What’s the name of his village in Spain?”

  “You never told me.” I refrained from snorting at him. “Is that what’s on this chip?”

  “Among other things.” Roman looked away from me as he tucked the manila folders back inside his briefcase. “You’re not ready for Blood Vice. Not by a long shot.” He scoffed, but the sound was more disappointed than patronizing. “I wasn’t able to talk any sense into you before. That chip is all the help I have to offer on such short notice.”

  “Thank you.” I wasn’t about to look a gift horse in the mouth, especially since I hadn’t expected Roman to come bearing gifts in the first place.

  He cleared his throat and rolled a thumb over the dials on the case, locking it. “When do you leave?” he asked.

  “Tomorrow evening, as soon as I rise.”

  Roman nodded and cleared his throat again before tugging at the cuffs of his shirt. He couldn’t seem to make eye contact with me for more than a second or two. It was unnerving, and I wasn’t sure if his discomfort stemmed from guilt—like my own discomfort—or from something else.

  Sharing blood was disconcertingly invasive. Like walking in on someone while they were naked. Or bumping into them and grazing their crotch with your hand. It was awkward and sometimes unintentionally intimate, especially in a life-or-death situation. I remembered the conflicted feelings I’d had after Roman had saved my life…and now I imagined he was riding that same roller coaster.

  “Any final words of wisdom?” I asked, trying to fill the looming silence.

  “Don’t share anything with anyone that you don’t have to,” he said. “Don’t try to make friends.”

  I narrowed my eyes at him. “Is that advice working out well for you?”

  “I’m serious.” A muscle in his jaw feathered and his gaze met mine. “The other cadets will be more experienced and conniving. They’ll use anything you give them to gain an advantage. This isn’t like the police academy, Jenna. And it’s no Quantico either. The bat cave might sound like a cute nickname, but I assure you, it’s like nothing you’ve experienced. Be careful.”

  I swallowed a scathing remark and nodded, trying to push past the tension to find some sliver of gratitude. Roman was trying to help. He didn’t have to. I could cut him some slack for his effort—even if it was at least half-inspired by self-preservation.

  “I’ll be careful,” I said. “Thanks.” I held up the plastic box with the memory card.

  “Don’t mention it. To anyone,” he added, confirming the literal sense of his reply.

  Roman pulled the briefcase off the counter and turned for the living room. I followed him to the front door, keeping a comfortable distance behind. His cocoa butter and grass scent tended to overwhelm me whenever I got too close, and I wondered what he would smell like once fall and winter set in. It was ridiculous, but I was looking forward to finding out once I returned from Denver.

  Out on my front porch, Roman turned to face me. “There’s a bed and breakfast halfway between here and Denver,” he said, blanching as if he wasn’t really sure he wanted to share the information. “It’s just past Salina, Kansas. They cater to your kind. The Cottage Crypt.” At my raised eyebrow he added, “Vanessa and I stayed there on our way to St. Louis.”

  “I’ll check it out.”

  Roman dipped his head in a final farewell nod before descending the porch steps and cutting across the dark lawn toward his SUV. As I watched him pull away from the curb, I tugged my cell phone out of the waistband of my shorts, eager to investigate what was on the chip.

  Hopefully something more useful than a bathing suit or jumper cables.

  * * * * *

  “Ouch!” I jerked my arm away from Vin and grimaced as I rubbed the angry welt forming in the bend of my elbow. “Just because I heal faster doesn’t mean that hurts any less,” I snapped, leaning away as Vin reached for me.

  “Sorry.” He bit his bottom lip and gave me a pained smile. “Your quick healing is part of the problem. I have to push the needle in deeper just to keep the blood flowing long enough to fill one of these.” He pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose and shook a tube of my dark blood before slipping it inside an insulated lunch bag where he’d stashed five more just like it.

  In the past, he’d drawn two at most. But since I was going to be in Denver for the next three months, he’d requested more. My conscience was taking a beating for it—along with my elbows.

  Once I became an official Blood Vice agent, I would be expected to arrest vampires who supplied human doctors or scientists with their blood for study and experimentation. I felt like a total hypocrite, and I knew that this part of my relationship with Vin would have to come to an end soon.

  I should have cut him off a long time ago, but I’d let guilt cripple my morals. Guilt over the fact that I couldn’t offer him a normal relationship. We would never have a nice meal together. Never share a bag of popcorn at the movies or have Christmas dinner with his family. We’d never feed each other wedding cake. We’d never have children. We would never grow old together.

  This thing we had was dying, and there was no preventing it. And while he was technically part of my blood harem, he was outside the inner circle. He wasn’t going with us to Denver. Vin was a forensic pathologist at the county morgue. He couldn’t just take a three-month vacation to follow me across the country because I vanted to suck his blood. If I was being honest with myself, it wasn’t really his blood I vanted anyway.

  When my eyes closed and my teeth sank into flesh, there was only ever one person I saw. Roman. It wasn’t right or fair, but it wasn’t something I had any control over. On any given day, I couldn’t decide if I hated the half-sired agent or wanted him. Maybe I just hated that I wanted him.

  And there was that guilt again. Spurring me on to do the stupid thing whenever Vin gave me one of his charming, boyish smiles and asked me to open a vein. I knew he’d offer me his neck after, too, which made refusing him even harder.

  Collins and Mandy were really more than enough, but neither of them was comfortable with the fang-to-flesh action. So they bled into a cup for me. It got the job done, but…something was missing. I couldn’t pu
t my finger on it, the aching pinch of rejection I felt in the pit of my stomach. I didn’t experience it with Vin, but my guilt was so thick, how could I feel anything else?

  “I don’t have to work tomorrow,” Vin said as he stood from the dining room table. He crossed the kitchen and stashed the lunch bag of my blood in the refrigerator.

  I glanced down at my watch. “Sunrise is in an hour.”

  “Right.” He blinked stiffly.

  A human girlfriend could have lain in bed with him all day, or gone for a walk in the park, or done any number of normal couple things. I, on the other hand, would be dead until the sun set. Dead and alone. The thought of Vin snuggling my cold, unconscious body freaked me right the hell out.

  I sucked in my bottom lip and watched him from across the kitchen, waiting patiently. This was the part where he was supposed to offer me his blood, and I was yearning for it. Either because he’d taken so much of mine, or because I knew this would likely be the last time I snacked on him. At least for three months. Maybe forever.

  Vin slipped his glasses off and set them on the counter. Then he undid the top few buttons of his polo, his lips twitching up into a suggestive grin. A different brand of hunger than my own lit his eyes. He was just as eager to give his blood as I was to take it.

  Even if this would never work out, I was going to miss Vin. The familiarity. The easy comfort food. The genuine care he took to make sure I survived this strange nightmare that was my new reality.

  I pushed my guilt and gratitude aside and stood to follow him back to my bedroom, ready to sate my thirst before sending him off and dying with the dawn.

  Chapter Two

  Road trips at night sucked. The highway was lined with semis and reckless asshats who had clearly been on the road for too long. Or who were drunk, I decided as we passed a weaving car that was halfway on the shoulder. Their turn signal had been flashing for five miles.

 

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