I hesitated, before I realized that he was being too casual. That was exactly how my friend Annabeth Casey had acted when she’d lost her virginity to Percy Johnson in tenth grade. Daiki did save that woman, and he’d done it by making fire with his hands.
“I saw you!” I said. “The night before last, you burned up a mugger right outside of my window.”
Daiki pursed his lips. “You are insane,” he said, but I saw the hint of worry lining his eyes. He ran his fingers through his hair and glanced around like he was checking for listeners.
I felt anger welling in my chest. I would have been happy to think that I’d imagined the way he’d lit his hands on fire, but the way he dodged the question and accused me of being crazy – that really got my blood boiling. “I’m not,” I said. “How did you do it? Are you magic?”
As soon as the words left my lips, I cringed. Daiki might be right to think that I was crazy after asking a question like that. But he didn’t react with amusement or disdain. He just looked more worried. I suddenly wondered if I’d struck a nerve when I’d asked if he was magic. My curiosity peeked.
Daiki licked his lips and looked like he was going to speak, but then seemed to decide against it. Instead, he tossed the last garbage bag into the dumpster and hunched his shoulders. Without another word, he marched through the backdoor to the restaurant and out of sight.
“Hey, wait!” I said. “Ignoring me won’t make me go away!”
After a moment, I followed him, but he’d disappeared by the time I got into the restaurant – he’d probably retreated to the kitchen. Ichiru gave me a take-out bag full of steaming rice and fragrant meat. He waved me off when I tried to give him money, but I managed to slip a twenty into the cash register on my way out.
I ate the food on a bench outside of the Institute, before heading up to the computer lab and logging onto the search engine. I typed in ‘fire powers’ and got about 200,000,000 results.
“Darn,” I muttered.
“Woah, watch that language,”
I looked up and saw one of the women from my class standing behind me. She had pastel blue hair and a spike through her earlobe. Her shirt was so badly ripped that at first I wondered why she hadn’t thrown it out, but then I realized that it was probably meant to look that way.
“Oh, sorry –”
“I was joking, Dorothy,” she said. Her voice had a smoky, husky quality to it.
“My name is Skye,” I said.
“I know,” she replied, pulling a chair out next to me and settling herself into it. “But you look like a Dorothy. As in ‘we’re not in Kansas anymore’. I’m Terry.”
I nodded. I couldn’t think of a polite way to ask if there was something she wanted from me. “How do you like the classes?” I asked.
Terry wrinkled her button nose and sniffed disdainfully. “Professor’s an arrogant douche,” she said. “‘Painting isn’t art’ – who the fuck doesn’t think painting isn’t art?”
I felt my eyebrows rise at her words. “That’s what I thought!” I said. “But everyone went along with it –”
“Of course we did,” Terry said, shrugging again. “He grades our papers doesn’t he? Gotta tell him what he wants to hear. Don’t worry though, next semester we’re getting Armstrong. She’s totally into sketching and realism,”
I felt a swelling of joy in my belly. If this girl – this trendy, hip, New York girl – thought that our professor was a fool for dismissing painting, then maybe the next few years wouldn’t be a total disaster after all.
Terry glanced at the search results on my screen. “Fire powers?” she asked.
I hesitated. Not only had I promised Daiki that I wouldn’t tell anyone what I’d seen, but I knew that no one would ever believe me if I said ‘flaming vigilante’ out loud. “I’m just – ah, working,”
“Oh yeah?” Terry said, smiling. She had a crooked, mischievous smile. “Magic powers? Like Avatar?” I hadn’t heard of it, but I nodded anyway. “Yeah, that kind of thing looks great in watercolor.”
“I usually work with oils,” I said, feeling an answering smile curling over my lips. It felt like it had been a lifetime since I’d talked to someone about this. “I was just looking for a real-world reference,”
Terry cocked an eyebrow. “Real-world fire powers?” she asked. Before I could explain, she waved a hand at the computer screen. “Well, there’s fire twirlers, breathers, you know – circus acts and stuff. You could take some inspiration from them. One of the blogs I follow mentioned a woman who thought she was dating a dragon.”
“A dragon?” I asked.
She smirked. “Yeah, I think – hang on.” She took my keyboard without asking my permission. She pulled up a new page. “According to her, dragons aren’t fire-breathing lizards. They’re sexy Asians.”
Asians? I kept my face neutral as I scanned the blog post Terry had found. It was written by someone called FoxyCitten419 several years ago. Apparently, FoxyCitten419’s ex-boyfriend could set his skin on fire at will. That sounded an awful lot like what Daiki’s could do.
Terry was watching me, waiting for a reaction. “Interesting,” I said slowly.
“That’s one word for it,” she said with a snort. I sent the blog to the printer and closed the browser. “Are you doing anything this weekend?” Terry asked.
“Um, no?” I said. “Why?”
“I’m heading to a gallery opening on Saturday night. Thought you might like to come.”
I smiled hesitantly. “Well, that sounds nice. Do you mind if I ask – I mean, I’m glad you’re inviting me, but we haven’t actually spoken?”
Terry grinned and nudged my boot with her foot. She wore loose sandals, and there was a pink semi-colon tattooed on the top of her foot. “You need to work on your poker face, Dorothy – I could see how mad you were when you heard that painting isn’t real art. We’re kindred spirits, you and I.”
I felt my cheeks go red and toyed with the edge of my shirt. I felt so unbelievably unfashionable sitting next to her. Maybe if we became friends, she could take me shopping for some real art-student clothes. “Just let me know a time and place,” I said.
“Great!” Terry said. She checked her watch and grimaced. “I gotta go, my shift’s starting soon – but hey, gimme your number and I’ll text you the details?”
I typed my number into her phone and, after a moment’s hesitation, put my name as ‘Dorothy’ in her contacts. Why not? I’d loved those books growing up. She grinned when she saw it and winked at me as she left the computer lab. I retrieved the printed blog post and stuffed it into my bag, thinking about how excited Mama would be when I told her I’d made a friend.
Chapter Four
That night, I kept my pepper spray in my hand and my finger on the trigger as I prowled up and down alleyways. So far, no one had attacked me. I’d met a homeless man who had asked very politely if I’d had any change, and I’d given him ten dollars.
I walked down every alley. I passed through shadows so dark that I couldn’t see my hand in front of my face, and under street lights so bright that moths had congregated on the glass like a swarming blanket of wings and fuzzy bodies. After four hours of wandering, I was chilled to the bone and aggravated enough to want someone to try to mug so I could give him a piece of my mind. It would figure that the one night I wanted to get mugged would be the one night all the muggers decided to stay in.
At 12:30, I called it a night. I walked back to my apartment building with my head held high, daring someone to come and grab me, but I arrived safe and sound within a few minutes. I let myself inside, thinking that I could always try again later in the week – or even wake up early and catch Daiki when he arrived at work.
I just had to know: who, or what, was Daiki?
I came to my front door and paused. It was ajar; the lock was busted and dangled pointlessly next to the doorjam. Inside, I could hear shuffling.
“Are you kidding me?” I shouted. I was so close to swearing that I had
to cover my mouth to keep it in.
I shoved the door open and found a skinny white man in a hoodie rifling through my kitchen drawers. He spun around and rushed towards me, raising his arms like he meant to tackle me. I’d seen that move a million times before, during the football games that Annabeth Casey used to drag me to so that she could stare at the players, and I fired the pepper spray at his eyes. He howled in pain and rage.
Before I could kick him, or punch him, or do any of the other things I wanted to do as the bubble of rage built inside of me – because how dare he, how dare he, and after I’d spent all night trying to get mugged – something landed against the living room window with a shuddering thud. The black shape moved and my window slid open smoothly. I stepped backward, ready to run, as Daiki flew into the room. He was actually flying. A pair of leathery black wings had sprouted out of his back and flapped once as he threw himself at the man in the hoodie.
I felt my mouth fall open. Fire powers was one thing, but wings? FoxyCitten419’s blog hadn’t mentioned wings. Huge, bat-like wings with strong bones. Actual, honest-to-God, wings.
Daiki grabbed the man by his hoodie, hoisted him up, and carried him back to the open window. I felt a stirring in my belly at the sight of how easy it was for him to do it. Daiki was strong. The man thrashed and grunted, but before he could pull himself out of Daiki’s grip, Daiki had dropped him out of the window.
“Hey!” I shouted. I ran forward, brushing against the wings in my haste and feeling a shudder of awareness at how warm and soft they felt against my arm. I stuck my head out the window.
The man in the hoodie was lying on the hard concrete. He moved weakly.
“He’ll be fine,” Daiki said quietly. I turned just in time to see his wings collapse into his back and disappear. Now he just looked like an ordinary, extremely beautiful man, but the image of those wings was burned into my mind. “Broken ankle, at the worst.”
I realized that he wasn’t wearing a shirt. The soft curves of his stomach muscles gleamed with a light layer of sweat. His skin was a warm, brown color that made me think of caramel milkshakes and butterscotch candy. That thought led me to thoughts of running my tongue over those muscles. I tore my eyes away from his amazing body and glared at his face.
“Two muggings!” I shouted, making him jump. “And a home invasion. In three days. Is this the worst neighborhood in Manhattan or am I just unbelievably lucky?”
Daiki ran a hand over his hair. It took every ounce of willpower I had not to watch the way his pectorals shifted when he raised his hand. “It’s actually pretty safe by New York standards,” Daiki said. “Although I’ve noticed that it’s been getting worse recently.”
“You have wings,”
He grimaced. “I – no?” He must have seen how unimpressed I was with that remark, because his shoulders slumped. “Yes,” he muttered.
I nodded. “Why?”
“I’d rather not say,”
I growled at him. Despite the impressive muscles on display he seemed to be a little worried that I was going to attack him. I still had the pepper spray in my hand, and I was seriously considering using it. “Why were you outside my apartment?” I asked.
Daiki chewed his lip and crossed his arms over his chest. “Why were you walking down dark alleys all evening?”
“Were you following me?”
“Were you trying to get yourself killed?”
I raised the pepper spray and, instead of spraying him with it, whacked him over the head with the canister.
“Ow!” he said, grabbing my wrist before I could reach back and hit him again. I kicked him in the shin as we wrestled over the spray, and he let out a more urgent “Ow!” before pulling the spray out of my hand. Once I was disarmed, he took a big step back.
“You were stalking me!” I said.
“I wasn’t stalking,” Daiki said, raising his hands in surrender. “I promise, I was just – well, I was worried. About what you would do,”
“What I would do?”
“No one is supposed to know about me,” he replied quickly. “I just needed to know that our secret is safe. There are people out there who could hurt us.”
“Us,” I said. “Your grandfather? He’s like you?” He hesitated, before nodding grimly. I felt the anger melt out of my body as I considered the adorably accommodating man who’d taught me how to use chopsticks. I stepped forward, raising my hands to mimic his stance. “I promise,” I said, in my most sincere voice. “I will not do anything to get you or your grandfather hurt.”
He scanned my face, looking for a lie. Eventually he seemed to relax. “Okay,” he said finally. “Thank you,”
“Would you like some coffee?” I asked.
He blinked. He looked surprised. “Sure,” he said.
I led him into the kitchen where I’d set up a kettle and microwave the day I’d arrived in New York. I hadn’t had much of a chance to use them. I filled the kettle and switched it on, busying myself with the mugs and coffee pot while Daiki stood awkwardly next to the counter. I kept expecting him to sprout those massive black wings and take flight from my living room window.
“Sorry I don’t have any chairs,” I said. “I haven’t had the chance to go shopping.”
“How long have you been in town?”
“Three days,”
His eyebrows flew up into his hairline. “You’re having a bad week,”
I laughed at him. “You’re telling me,” I said. I liked that he could joke about it. It made me feel better about everything. “My parents begged me not to move here.”
The kettle whistled and I poured two cups of coffee. We both took it black. I tried not to read anything into that. We sipped in uncomfortable silence for a moment, before the tension became unbearable and I blurted out: “Are you a dragon?”
Daiki blinked slowly. He looked like he was doing some quick thinking. “Why do you ask?” he asked.
That may as well have been a confirmation. I sighed and set my mug down. My bag was on the ground next to the door – I had dropped it when Daiki had flown into the room. I closed the door, which was still open, and squatted down to shuffle through my bag for the blog post Terry had showed me. Once I found it, I handed it to Daiki.
When he saw the paper, his eyes went dark. “She said that she deleted it,” he said.
“You’re the dragon ex-boyfriend?”
I yelped and jumped backwards as his hand burst into flame, engulfing the paper in an instant. He dropped it into the sink and cast me an apologetic look. “Sorry,” he said. “My temper got the better of me. That can happen sometimes.”
“Because you’re a dragon,”
“I’m a shifter,” Daiki said. “Humans got the idea of dragons from shifters.”
I nodded slowly. I wasn’t sure whether to be happy that I was right, mystified at the idea that dragons are real, or horrified that there was a live dragon in my kitchen. The conflicting emotions must have shown on my face, because he pursed his lips and stared down at his shoes.
“Sorry,” he said again. “I know it’s a lot to take in,”
“No, it’s – it’s fine,” I said. “I’m just… dragons are real,” I ended lamely.
“Dragons are real,” he agreed. He took another gulp of coffee and set his mug down. “It’s not common knowledge. I’ll tell you what you want to know – just, please, I wasn’t lying when I said that there are people who could hurt us. I can fight, but Oji-san shouldn’t. He’d be a sitting duck if they found us.”
“I already promised I wouldn’t,” I said, squashing the surge of warmth in my belly at how protective Daiki was of his grandfather. Of course, I reminded myself, Daiki had been running around the neighborhood defending people from muggers and home invaders. Protecting people seemed to be what he did best.
Daiki took a deep breath. “We’re a breed of shifter,” he said. “Our kind used to be able to turn into lizards – like the myths – but that got bred out when we started marrying humans. No
w, most of my kind can only make fire. Some can manifest wings.”
“Like you,”
He nodded. “Both of my parents were shifters, I’ve got good genes.”
“What happened to them?”
His eyes went dark again, like they had when I’d shown him the blog post. I glanced warily at his hands but he seemed to have himself under control. “They were murdered. By hunters,”
“Dragon hunters?”
“Hunters will kill anything, as long as it’s not human,” Daiki said. “There are other kinds of shifters, though. My parents were killed in Japan, so Oji-san brought me to America to hide. He raised me in Chicago, but – well, I made a mistake.”
“Your ex?” I asked.
He nodded grimly. “I shouldn’t have told her, but – well, I was young and stupid. She dumped me and wrote that blog. Hunters read it. Oji-san and I only just got away.” Daiki paused. “I don’t think he’s forgiven me for that. After what happened to my parents. What I did was careless.”
The blog post had said that they had only dated a few months before he’d told her what he was. He must have really trusted her, I thought. Or maybe he was just a hopeless romantic. Someone with such a capacity for love and affection shouldn’t have to feel insecure about trusting someone with his secrets.
“Trusting someone isn’t careless,” I said. “It’s human,”
Daiki raised an eyebrow at me. “I’m not human,”
I rolled my eyes at him. “It’s a figure of speech, doofus,” He smiled. It made him so much more beautiful. “Why do you do it, then? Fighting muggers, saving people?”
He frowned. “A friend of mine was killed in a mugging a few years ago. She worked at the restaurant.”
“Can I see your fire again?” I asked suddenly.
He blinked at that question. “I thought I’d scared you,” he said, waving his hand vaguely towards the sink and the smoldering ashes of the printed blog post.
“You startled me,” I said. “I wasn’t expecting spontaneous combustion.”
BILLIONAIRE ROMANCE: The Unforgettable Billionaires: The Complete Collection Boxed Set 1-12 (Young Adult Rich Alpha Male Billionaire Romance) (Alpha Bad Boy Billionaire Romance) Page 67