The Angel's Hunger (Masters of Maria)
Page 25
“Do you trust him?”
“Not as far as I can throw him.” She pushed herself up onto all fours and was about to turn, but he grabbed her thighs.
“Tamatsu,” she warned.
“I like this view, elf. If I were on death row, I know exactly what I’d ask for as a last meal.” As if she’d needed any hints, he pushed a fingertip into her cunt. It took all the fortitude she had left not to incite him any further by bearing down onto him.
“Sweet Danu, you’re a pervert.”
“So?”
“You once thought the top of me was just as nice as my bottom.”
“Are you inviting me to find something else to fit my cock into? I’m hard, Noelle.”
And she was wet, but living a human life meant having human responsibilities. Perhaps fae in the Otherworld could lounge around and fuck all day, but there were people depending on her. “Love, I need to go.” She wriggled away and turned to face him.
He had the audacity to pout. She didn’t think she’d ever seen an angel pout before, or if she had, they certainly hadn’t looked so debauched while doing it.
Must be the hair.
She picked up a swath of it from his chest and twined the lock around her finger. “I need to do this for Willa. You know I’m right.” And she needed a hair’s breadth of space from Tamatsu. Being with him was as wonderful as she remembered, but she, better than anyone, knew that sometimes lust got in the way of logic. She needed to assure herself that she was doing the right thing, and that the only thing that would come back and bite her on the ass would be him.
“I’m going to go take a shower.” She bent and bussed his cheek. “Maybe you can clean up last night’s spoiled dinner while I get ready, and get something to eat, too. I’m sure you’re hungry.”
“Yes. Hungry.” He palmed her breast.
She shook her head.
“But I’m sure a meal will have to suffice if you’re going to stop touching me.”
“Is there enough down there to hold you over during twenty minutes of separation?”
She crawled to the foot of the bed quickly before he really decided he liked the view too much for her to leave.
“Perhaps fifteen, but I’ll endure.”
She giggled as she put her feet to the floor and stretched her abused muscles. “Hmm, endure. Such an angel. The world doesn’t deserve you.”
Nodding, he padded past her, tall, broad, nude, and perfect.
She blew a raspberry. “Hell, for that matter, I don’t deserve you, either.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Tamatsu eyed Blue with all the skepticism the cocky ass deserved. From the moment Noelle had stepped into the airport terminal, the Coyote had been far too solicitous for Tamatsu’s liking. Many Coyotes were, in Tamatsu’s experience. They were far better at wooing people when they had their complete faculties about them. The Maria pack had been disordered for so long that probably no one in the town knew just how unusual they were. If the Coyotes hadn’t been saddled with a weak alpha for so long—and then no alpha at all—they may actually have been a force to be reckoned with.
The only force Tamatsu was worried about at the moment, though, was Blue. That was why he was sitting in a parked plane instead staring down deities like Perkūnas, Tohil, or Yu Shi. Unfortunately, he lacked some angels’ ability to be in two places at once, and the dog smiling at Tamatsu’s elf needed minding.
Blue sat low in his seat across the aisle from them, swirling the ice cubes in his whiskey glass. “You sure I can’t get you anything? A drink? A snack?”
If Blue had been anyone else, Tamatsu might have said yes to the snack, but he wasn’t going to give the man the satisfaction of doing him the favor.
“I’m sure.” Noelle crossed her legs and bobbed the top knee. She’d had on pants at first, but she’d changed because he liked her calves.
He regretted having her change because, evidently, Blue liked her calves very much, too. Being what he was, he didn’t even bother trying to disguise his admiration. He stared and smiled while doing it.
Tamatsu decided he wouldn’t use his katana on him. He’d want to leave a mess behind. Messes were satisfying.
“Thank you for the offer,” she said flatly. “But I’d like to get down to business.”
“Business.” Blue scoffed. “Why so formal? This is a friendly discussion, right?”
“Perhaps so, but let’s not diminish what the stakes of the situation are. We’re talking about a Coyote pack that’s in desperate need of leadership, and one that’s in a town where other sorts of shifters live. There needs to be some diplomacy in play. We can’t have someone swooping into town and setting off new feuds. The newcomer needs to maintain and increase order, not create chaos.”
“Some people would say that chaos is in a Coyote’s nature.”
Noelle nodded slowly. “Yes, I’ve heard similar quips. I also know that the burden falls on the Coyotes’ alpha to keep the pack calm and rational. He needs to lead by example.”
“And you don’t think I’m capable?” He showed more teeth when he smiled than a shark opening wide to swallow a turtle.
Tamatsu rolled his eyes and gave Noelle’s knee a squeeze. “I didn’t realize he was personally interested in the job.”
She cleared her throat and put her hand atop his as if in warning.
Blue’s gaze fell to their hands, and the smirk he’d been wearing nonstop lost a bit of steam.
“I didn’t know you were interested, Mr. Shapely,” she said.
Pulling his stare up to her eyes, he shrugged and swirled his ice some more. “Well, why not?”
“I figured you’d already have enough responsibilities of your own. Don’t you already have a pack to run?”
“My pack isn’t technically a pack,” Blue said. “It’s part of my entourage that splintered off from my father’s pack. When I moved, some of the guys went with me. That’s all.”
“So, you’d take those guys with you?”
“If they wanted to go. I like to give folks choice. I’m not an autocrat.”
“I see. And do you think you’d be happy living in a small town?”
“Honey, most shifter groups are anchored in small towns. That’s practical for the way we need to run around furry sometimes, but how small are you talking?”
“A town with one high school and no SuperTarget.”
Mr. Shapely drummed his fingers against the tops of his thighs. “Got an airport?”
She looked to Tamatsu.
He nodded. “A very small one.”
“You’d be able to land your plane, Mr. Shapely,” she said, “but the airport is small.”
“Small won’t be a problem. As long as I can get around easily, it doesn’t really matter where my house is. I’m on the road most days of the year.”
“What does this ass do for a living, anyway?”
Noelle cleared her throat and bobbed her knee beneath his hand. “The town the Coyotes are based in has a huge population of young families. I know clean living is hard for some people, so excuse me if I have to be pointed.”
Blue put on that smarmy smile again.
Tamatsu’s knuckles itched to meet his face.
“Can you tell me if any of the occupations of you or your pack members would be disruptive to the local population?” she asked.
“My money’s clean.”
“That wasn’t my question.”
“What are you so worried about?”
“The same things any rational woman would think in regards to a town that has a lot of kids in it, many of which don’t know that people like you exist.”
“And like you?”
“What I am isn’t pertinent to the discussion. My magic isn’t disruptive.”
“Noelle …” Tamatsu knew firsthand how dangerous she was.
She cleared her throat once more, and continued. “No one would know anything was off about me unless they paid too much attention to the fact that I don�
�t look much older from one year to the next. I can’t shapeshift anymore, and I don’t …” She made a dismissive flick of her hand. “Howl, for goodness’ sake.”
“Folks have been shapeshifting out in the open?” Blue’s expression had suddenly gone very serious. Apparently, that idea crossed a line for him.
She looked to Tamatsu again for an answer.
“Mostly, they’re loitering in town when they should be in other places. The locals don’t know what to make of them.”
She turned to Blue and repeated what Tamatsu said.
He added, “There have been a few running around in their canine forms, however the non-paranormal locals as of right now assume they’re natural coyotes.”
“The local humans haven’t yet discerned the difference between natural coyotes and shapeshifters in their animal forms,” she said to Blue. “There have been a few coyote shifters padding through town recently.”
“So, this is a place where wild coyotes would naturally roam?”
“Yes.”
Blue leaned back and rubbed the salt-and-pepper scruff on his chin.
Tamatsu had expected the man to be younger—late twenties or early thirties. An upstart. Either Coyote life and hard living had caused aggressive aging, or the guy was staring at his fortieth birthday on the horizon.
Tamatsu couldn’t think of a single alpha-level shifter who hadn’t taken a mate by the time they’d reached Blue’s age. There had to have been something wrong with him.
“Do you see some potential in that, Mr. Shapely?” Noelle asked.
He grunted. “You gotta admit that being able to blend in with the local wildlife populace makes some things easier. Even so, Coyotes—and most shifters, I imagine—learn from early on that we don’t show what we are in public. We don’t give folks any reason to be suspicious that we’re anything but aboveboard.”
Leaning forward, he rested his forearms on his knees and gave Tamatsu a hard stare—as if he were waiting for him to rebut.
Tamatsu held his gaze. If the dog thought he was going to make him uncomfortable, he needed to try a lot harder and come at him with more weapons than just teeth and claws. If Tamatsu had had his voice, he could have turned the man into stone in a breath.
Maybe it was a good thing that he didn’t. Retaliating without his voice was harder, but it was supposed to be.
Grinding his teeth, he slid his hand up the back of Noelle’s blouse. Skin-to-skin touching helped to stave off the flare-ups.
Blue pulled his gaze back to Noelle then. “I’d like to see the place, if you think whoever’s in charge right now might be amenable. Or can I talk to whoever they are? I assumed they’d be in on this conference.”
“She was supposed to be.”
“Well, let me talk to her.”
Noelle pulled her phone from her tote, and passed the device from one hand to the other for a few beats. “Let me feel her out first. She’s not especially social.”
Tamatsu watched her fast fingers glide across the screen, formulating a perfectly cogent text message on the first try.
While she waited for the response, Tamatsu looked up. Another Coyote had joined them in the fuselage. Younger than Blue. Wore glasses and tidy clothes, though not necessarily fashionable ones. Put-together, though, which meant he’d made an effort.
He bent and whispered something into the elder dog’s ear.
Blue’s brow furrowed. “Right now?” he asked the man.
“Tomorrow at the latest. He expects you to be there.”
“I’m not making him any promises.”
“Do you want me to tell him that? Because—”
Blue waved a dismissive hand at him. “No. Don’t get mired in that mess. If he’s gonna snap at anyone, let me be the scapegoat. I’ll call and let him know whether or not I’ll be there.”
The man nodded.
“She’s available, Mr. Shapely,” Noelle said.
“Great.” He stood and strode to the door, still open to the tarmac. “Hey, Kenny? I wanna get off the ground as soon as possible. Need to file a flight plan. I’ll let you know where we’re going.” He looked back to Noelle. “Where are we going?”
“No. Wait.” She flashed her phone at him. “We were going to call?”
“Phone call’s not gonna be enough, if she doesn’t want me to go there and take a look.” He shrugged gallantly. “Hey, that’s fine. But I’m not gonna give serious consideration to moving into anyone’s damn pack without seeing what kind of mess they’ve made first. If she’s not amenable to that, maybe I can do some rooting around to find someone willing to take the chance. I guarantee you, whoever that person is isn’t gonna be as good as me.”
“You talk a big game.”
“That’s not big talk, princess. That’s truth.”
“Blue?” Kenny called from the tarmac through a suspiciously strained voice.
Realizing why, Tamatsu emitted a silent groan. He didn’t need to see the disturbance to sense what was outside, and he would have bet his katana that the thing had flat, glassy eyes and a fish mouth.
“Yeah?” Blue called out.
There was grunting, swearing, and all three people in the plane filed toward the door.
Spotting the cause of the disturbance, Tamatsu rolled his eyes and reached for his katana.
Always ready for a fight, Noelle found a knife from some hidden place on her person, but before she could throw the thing, Blue, in an impressive leap, swatted the thing from the air. He was on the spirit as soon as it hit the ground, one booted foot atop the creature’s head, and his face set into a grimace.
“What. In. The. Hell?” he asked through gritted teeth.
“Um …” Noelle tucked her knife beneath her shirt and cleared her throat. “I believe that’s a—”
“Oh, no, honey, I know what that is.” He pushed harder, approximately where the thing’s neck would be if it’d had a true one. It would have needed shoulders to have a neck. “I know all sorts of arcane shit, and I know that these things don’t come out unless they’re attached to someone. Whose are they?”
He may have asked “who,” but his gaze was on Tamatsu.
Tamatsu folded his arms over his chest.
“He didn’t call them,” Noelle said, “if that’s what you’re trying to imply.”
“Oh, yeah? Because that’d be a pretty slick way to end a meeting.” Blue narrowed his eyes. “Or to set a guy up.”
Noelle squeezed between the two advancing men, but put her back to Tamatsu, physically impeding his forward movement.
He could have moved her—and easily—but just by touching him, she’d distracted him enough to put a pause in his step.
“Time out,” Noelle said. Whipping around to Tamatsu, she wagged a finger at him. “If you have it in your mind to kill anyone today, find someone else.”
“Pardon me?” Blue retorted.
Noelle turned to him. “There are circumstances in play that you don’t understand, but I can assure you that those things being here aren’t by his accord or mine.”
“Explain.”
“That is really none of his business.”
“That is really none of your business, Mr. Shapely. I apologize for the disruption. I can’t promise this won’t happen again, but I can swear an oath that he doesn’t choose for them to show up. Elves are serious about oaths.”
Without taking his gaze off Tamatsu, Blue ground his heel harder against the thing. Harder and harder until it exploded.
“Ugh.” Noelle took a step away from Tamatsu and looked down at her ruined pantyhose. “Gods. Again? Do you have any idea how much these things cost?”
Blue cringed. “Sorry. Can never tell where the splatter’s gonna go. You can clean up on the plane, if you’d like. There’s bound to be some towels or something in the lavatory.”
Noelle closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and then rolled her gaze up to Tamatsu.
He raised an eyebrow.
Blue sidled over with h
is assistant at his heels, and looked from one to the other. “So … any other surprises I should know about? ’Cause I gotta tell you, to be a Were-coyote, I find the supernatural shit a mite bit frustrating at times. The place I come from is kind of where all the silliness clumps together. You can’t walk a block down the street without some shit happening. Tell me the place you’re trying to sell me on isn’t like that.”
“It isn’t,” Noelle said.
Tamatsu grimaced. Maria definitely was.
“At least, I don’t think it is.”
He put her hand to her neck. “The chaos is there for people who know what they’re looking for.”
Noelle cleared her throat and flicked a bit of goop off her belt buckle. “Maybe I’d be most accurate if I said there’s trouble there if you know where to look.”
Blue seemed to be considering that as he nodded. “Well. I guess I could live with that.”
Tamatsu untucked the shirt Noelle had just retucked and pressed his hand against her back. He hated that feeling that he was spiraling to a dark, needy place and that his self-control would be so low. He hated that hungry place and the unfounded fear of annihilation that came with it if he didn’t do enough to sate his urges.
“Noelle …”
She glanced back at him and immediately whispered, “Oh,” and pulled his hand.
She squeezed his fingers tight, and turned back to Blue. “So, you’d like to go?” she asked him.
“If your lady there says I’m welcome, I’d like to take a look.”
“Fuel up your plane or file your flight plan or whatever. I need five minutes.”
Tamatsu squeezed her hand harder. Five minutes wasn’t going to be enough.
“Uh—ten. Ten minutes, maybe. Alone.”
If Blue thought her emphasis on the word was suspicious, he didn’t say so. “All right. Fine with me. I’m gonna head into that building and see if they’re holding a package for me. Holler if you need anything.”
Noelle gave him a tight grin and nodded.
He strode toward the airport building with his bespectacled aide on his heels. He issued commands at rapid-fire pace, and Tamatsu herded Noelle up the plane steps.