Praise for the novels of
STELLA CAMERON
“A sexy and mysterious tale of supernatural murder…I recommend you curl up under the covers and lock the doors before reading.”
—Yasmine Galenorn, USA TODAY bestselling author on Out of Mind
“The master of sexy intrigue brings a sensual new voice to the chilling paranormal realm.”
—Christine Feehan, New York Times bestselling author on Out of Body
“Hard-boiled and hard-core.”
—Booklist on A Grave Mistake
“Cameron captures the Bayou Teche ambience.”
—Publishers Weekly on A Marked Man
“A wonderful, fast-paced, furious page-turner.”
—Philadelphia Enquirer on Tell Me Why
“Those looking for spicy…fare will enjoy a heaping helping on every page.”
—Publishers Weekly on Now You See Him
“Cameron returns to the wonderfully atmospheric Louisiana setting…for her latest sexy-gritty, compellingly readable tale.”
—Booklist on Kiss Them Goodbye
“Steamy, atmospheric and fast-paced.”
—Publishers Weekly on Key West
“If you haven’t read Stella Cameron, you haven’t read romantic suspense. Cameron has a lock on atmospheric mystery and seething passion that thrills and chills.”
—Elizabeth Lowell, New York Times bestselling author
Also by
New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author
STELLA CAMERON
CYPRESS NIGHTS
A COLD DAY IN HELL
TARGET
A MARKED MAN
BODY OF EVIDENCE
A GRAVE MISTAKE
TESTING MISS TOOGOOD
NOW YOU SEE HIM
A USEFUL AFFAIR
KISS THEM GOODBYE
ABOUT ADAM
THE ORPHAN
7B
ALL SMILES
The Court of Angels Novels
OUT OF MIND
OUT OF BODY
STELLA CAMERON
Out of Sight
A Court of Angels Novel
For Jerry,
My partner and friend.
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Epilogue
Prologue
Sykes Millet had mostly enjoyed his reputation as an inscrutable man. He did not, so most said, show his feelings often.
Among the paranormal families of New Orleans, particularly those closest to the Millets, like the Fortunes and the Montrachets, Sykes was the powerful go-to talent they could rely on to keep his cool and find solutions under any pressure.
Not anymore.
Not as long as his family kept trying to run his life for him.
Underneath his calm exterior, he fumed. And he would do what he had to do to step out of his appointed role as the accepting, level one and into what he really wanted to be—what he was: a man pushed to the limit, whose anger simmered just beneath a smooth surface and was ready to erupt.
He was sick of being used.
From now on he would do what was right for him, preferably without harming anyone else, but definitely without depriving himself to make others more comfortable.
For months all had been quiet in the French Quarter. Just as many people trolled the streets beneath flashing neon signs. The truly drunk jostled with the drunk-on-anticipation. The bars and clubs, the fortune tellers and sellers of mostly fake voodoo paraphernalia plied their trade just as aggressively. Barkers heckled passersby, hawking topless dancing and whatever else they thought would bring the customers in. “Topless bikini,” were words thrown out in one breath, followed by, “Lap dance.” And the hungry—for whatever—rolled in. The initiated looked to the unnamed and hidden places to satisfy their more exotic tastes.
The reason Sykes considered the Quarter quiet was because there had been no new strings of murders bearing marks of the Embran, an alien tribe of shape-shifters with an empire deep beneath the earth’s surface.
While police honchos and the city elders did their best to pretend there was no cause for panic, the Millets and their friends had repulsed two Embran attempts to take over New Orleans and enslave its inhabitants.
A sculptor, Sykes stood in the studio at his house off St. Peter Street in the Quarter and stared at the piece of green marble shot with gold he’d come home to find there—attached to a waist-high plinth—ten days earlier. He had not ordered it. He had known nothing about the thing until it appeared in the studio.
With the marble he had found a note bearing a few cryptic comments: “The stone is from the mountains of Morocco, subtle green-and-gold marble, and perfect for your task. Exquisite. I have the utmost faith in your abilities. Let your hands and inspiration guide you to find the form inside the stone. It will help in your quest. I will be in touch.”
Of course it was unsigned. Jude Millet, otherwise known as the Millets’ Mentor, Keeper of the Millet Book of the Way—or the rule book—knew Sykes would recognize the marble as coming from him. After all, Jude, gone from human presence for three hundred years, was still a Millet and shared the same erroneous belief as the rest of the clan, that Sykes could be controlled, manipulated and would always put family needs first.
“Just wait,” Sykes said, walking around the foot-and-a-half-high lump of stone. The veins of gold glittered. “All of you—all my manipulating friends are going to get a shock and you won’t like it. Finally I know what I want and I’m going to get it.”
Love and death had a lot in common.
Both took something away and replaced it with…something. Sometimes the alternative was a void, emptiness, sometimes peace, even euphoria, but always the feelings were intense and someone was forever changed.
Sykes knew a good deal about death. Not so much about love. He had managed to escape needing a permanent woman in his life. As a passionate man, compatible female acquaintances had brought him pleasure but not the kind of satisfaction he had come to long for.
He wanted one woman, his woman.
But he had been branded a curse. This supposed curse threatened that a man like him could bring disaster to the Millets. This was because he was a dark-haired, blue-eyed male in a paranormal family that had an almost unbroken line of red-haired, green-eyed people.
Talk of the curse, and the fear it brought, started three hundred years earlier when Jude Millet—yes, that Jude—had lost his fiancée and on the rebound married a flamboyant woman in Belgium. Through the attention she brought in Bruges, the accusations of witchcraft, t
he Millets had come close to complete destruction. They had been forced to flee, first to London, then to New Orleans where they had lived relatively quietly until links were made between them and a string of unnatural deaths.
So far Sykes had seen no other proof of this curse, no documentation, and the deductions were drawn from one event, but his father was convinced that if his son ever took his place as head of the family and married, they might all be on the run again. The truth of it had never been tested—in good part because there had not been anything but red-haired descendants, until Sykes. And Sykes had started to feel rebellious.
His father’s decision to turn over control of the family business to his brother Pascal and go in search of “a solution to the curse” didn’t help. Antoine Millet and his wife Leandra had taken off twenty years earlier leaving unwilling Pascal to assume what should have become Sykes place once his father either died or stepped down.
Sykes had endured the curse up to his ears, and his uncle Pascal felt pretty much the same way.
One fact that seemed to be ignored by Antoine was that the woman Jude had married three hundred years ago turned out to be an Embran in disguise. Not a mistake Sykes was likely to repeat. And the real curse they all faced was the result of those subterranean villains, a marauding race of shape-shifters, believing that the eventual return of the woman to her home had brought an end to their former immortality. They were slowly dying, much too slowly for Sykes and others who would celebrate the total extinction of these parasites.
Sykes didn’t spend much time considering his own strong paranormal powers, or those of the rest of the Millets, the Fortunes, the Montrachets and several other families in the city. Occasionally he did wish he wasn’t expected to follow the rules set out in a book he had seen only when it had been shown to him by an apparition of the mystical Mentor who supposedly watched over the family.
The book also hung somewhere between a real manifestation and an apparition, not that Sykes had any aversion to such things. But, in fact, he had never seen rules written on the pages he had seen, only pictures and a few words. But he had seen the book with its heavy gold cover encrusted with gems floating before him. So had his sister Marley and her husband Gray, his sister Willow and Ben Fortune who was now Willow’s Bonded partner.
The gold keys he and Ben had found prior to the sudden and uncanny absence of the Embran in the city were absolutely real. So far there were three of them, thin, small, at first glance all the same. They bore the inscription Bella Angelus—beautiful angel. But they were not the same. Each one had a subtle difference, meaning, he thought, that they fit different keyholes.
He was certain these keys, which he now kept safe, were an important—even the most important—clue to whatever mystery dogged the Millets, and perhaps some of the other paranormal families.
Sykes assumed the state that brought him the most comfort: invisibility. He phased out and surveyed his studio, in particular the piece he was supposedly working on.
Seated on one of the long benches where his tools lay, Sykes looked down at the chisels, picks, mallets and chips of stone his human body would have concealed, had he chosen such an uncomfortable place to sit. On occasion that state diverted him to get lost in insignificant silliness.
He surveyed the piece of marble again. He had been looking for “the form inside the stone” every day since it arrived. His hands seemed to guide his efforts yet he still had no idea what he was making.
To keep entertained, Sykes brought himself to the partial, ghostlike silhouette that was visible only to his own chosen few. He enjoyed adopting the form around his sister Marley who alternately felt honored that he rarely showed this side of himself to anyone else, or aggravated if he played games when she was otherwise occupied.
He reached to punch on some music and “Egyptian Fantasy” made him smile and sway.
Not for long. Cracking, faint but not so faint he didn’t hear it over the music, made him frown and search around. From the edge of his vision he caught a suggestion of movement and jumped to the floor, staring at the work in progress.
While he watched, a small, perfect and very female hand formed. Relaxed, most of the fingers curled into the palm, it seemed to point upward, and the material discarded fell to the floor in a scatter of fine rubble.
1
Poppy Fortune edged through the crowd of partygoers in the spectacular St. Louis Street home of Louisiana senatorial hopeful Ward Bienville. She had just arrived—very late—but the only thing she knew for certain was that she wanted to escape again.
That was out of the question. She was there because she had to get out among people in the know. The hints and clues she needed would not be found by spending all her spare time alone or with her family.
Months earlier Poppy had made a foolish mistake but she had tried to put it right, and now, since the man whose forgiveness she wanted most despised her, she was determined to dig her way out of the mess by making herself invaluable. Poppy was set on finding a way to help solve the growing threat New Orleans faced—even if the citizens didn’t seem to know its magnitude. She might not be as strong a paranormal talent as her three brothers, or some of the others they knew, but she had an unusual skill that might save all of them.
Familiar faces circulated around her, people she had seen at her family’s club, Fortunes, and in photos from society events. Poppy didn’t see anyone she would call a friend. She did get distant glimpses of one or two of Ward’s close advisors among a tight group of people at the far end of the room.
What she did see, bursting from among the crowd, were more superalpha brain clusters than she had ever seen in one place. In fact, she had never seen more than one at a time and very few of those. Okay, maybe just one or two altogether. But she frequently located clusters of superior but lesser strengths than these, and she translated the motives that drove the host minds. Love, hate, avarice were all very common. There was a very uncommon degree of heightened stimulation in this room.
Slowly, swallowing hard to moisten her dry throat, she picked out first one, then another person with the telltale glowing chartreuse circle pulsing amid tight clumps of shocking violet spheres no bigger than fine dots. There were four superalphas, two men and two women and she didn’t know any of them.
Poppy gasped.
They all had the same emotional trigger.
They were desperate. They wanted revenge and power. They wanted their own way.
They were afraid of failure.
She turned aside, breaking the intensely uncomfortable contacts. Of course there were strong-minded people present, ambitious people. After all, only those interested in shaping politics and events would come….
She was here because she and Ward Bienville had met at Fortunes, which she managed for the family, and he had behaved as if she were his personal goddess ever since. Gifts, phone calls several times a day, invitations to accompany him to faraway places and to be at his side in just about everything he did. Despite not being wildly attracted to him, Poppy was a little flattered by Ward’s attention. That could be because her life felt like one big, disappointing flop.
And it made her mad. Sure, she had done something seriously wrong and come close to hurting innocent people, but she was sorry. She would never stop being sorry, but things had turned out fine for her brother Ben and Willow Millet, his Bonded partner as the Millet family referred to making a lifetime commitment. Other people got second chances so why not her? The answer made her eyes sting. The one person she really wanted to be with was unlikely ever to forgive what she had almost caused.
Ward was fun to be with, his charisma and drive fascinated her, but she wasn’t falling in love with him. She wouldn’t allow herself to think too hard about the man she did want. But there was another reason for her hanging around with the senatorial hopeful—she was aura sensitive and not in the simple way the uninitiated thought of the gift.
Poppy could see brain patterns like the ones that had just s
hocked her—but usually much more ordinary patterns. They emitted heat that created a spectrum of pulsing colors, some so brilliant they hurt her eyes.
Ward Bienville had the kind of wide circle of friends and acquaintances that brought her in contact with artists, professionals, industrialists, financiers, people with the will and capability to achieve. And among these the brain patterns were the most diverse she had seen in one place. She had even seen one or two she could not type.
Paranormals were a different matter. Poppy longed to know what their brain patterns might look like but they were either absent or not apparent to her.
If paranormals showed their brain patterns to anyone, it wasn’t Poppy and she had tried hard to see them.
A brunette with a voice like Diana Krall sat at the piano wearing a skimpy silver dress. The bottom of the skirt didn’t reach the edge of the piano bench, and the bodice hung on to the tips of her breasts as if glued there. But she could sing, play and she was beautiful.
Ward was always surrounded with beautiful people, male and female, which made Poppy a little uneasy about holding her own in such company. She wasn’t a shrinking violet but neither was she vain. Her own looks were complimented often enough, and some expert opinions had assured her she had a killer figure, but since Ward could have anyone he wanted, why her?
More important than any reservations she had was the opportunity to mix with the kind of New Orleans citizens the Embran were known to prefer.
This was the first time she’d been to Ward’s home. Not that she had not been invited—frequently.
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