Ruthless Creatures: Chapter 11
Ruthless Creatures (Queens & Monsters Book 1)
A month goes by. Then another. Thanksgiving comes and goes. Teaching keeps me busy during the days, and Sloane, Mojo, and my art keep me busy at night.
I started painting again. Not the meticulous landscapes I used to do, but abstracts. Bold, violent slashes of color on the canvas, emotional and unrestrained. Landscapes are all about what I see, but theseâ¦these are all about what I feel.
I wonât show them to anyone. Theyâre more like spiritual vomit than art. I assume itâs a phase that will pass, but for now, Iâm into it.
Itâs way cheaper than therapy. Works better, too.
Davidâs letter had me unsettled for a while, but by the time December arrives, Iâm in a place where Iâm grateful for that one last piece of contact. That final missive from beyond the grave.
Iâve finally accepted that heâs never coming back.
Sloane was right: he had an accident. He went hiking that morning and lost his footing. The trails were rough. The terrain, steep. The canyons of the Sierras were carved by ancient glaciers cutting through granite, and some of them dive four thousand feet down from the peaks.
No matter how experienced he was in the wilderness, it couldnât save him from that one narrow stretch of rocky trail that crumbled under his weight and gave way, sending him tumbling down into oblivion.
Thereâs no other plausible explanation.
It took me five years to accept, but now that I have, I feelâ¦well, not exactly at peace. Iâm not sure Iâll ever get there. Accepting, maybe. And grateful.
Grateful for everything we had, even though it wasnât destined to last a lifetime.
My lifetime, anyway.
And if every once in a while Iâm sure I feel someone watching me, I chalk it up to having a guardian angel looking out for me from above.
The only other alternative is that Iâm suffering from paranoia, and Iâm really not prepared to deal with that.
When my doorbell rings two weeks before Christmas, itâs six oâclock. Itâs dark outside, snowing steadily, and Iâm not expecting anyone, so Iâm surprised.
Iâm also just about to take cookies out of the oven. One more minute and theyâll be done, two and theyâll be burnt to a crisp. The oven hasnât been replaced since the house was built in the sixties, and Iâm pretty sure itâs possessed by the devil.
I hurry to the door, pulling off my oven mitts. When I get the door open, Iâm distracted. Iâm also looking down, so the first thing I see is a pair of big black boots dusted with snow.
I look up from the boots to see more black: jeans, shirt, wool overcoat with the collar turned up. The eyes staring back at me are a shade lighter than black, but they might as well be for how darkly they burn.
Itâs Kage.
My heart plummets to somewhere around my kneecaps. I say loudly, âYou.â
âYes. Me.â
His voice is that same low, lovely rumble, a velvet stroke along my skin. The man should get a second job as a DJ on a porn radio station, if there is such a thing.
When I only stand there staring at him like a lunatic, he says, âYou dropped your oven mitts.â
Itâs true. My cheery red Santa-and-reindeer Christmas mitts lie discarded on the threshold between us, dropped in my shock at seeing him.
At least I didnât swallow my tongue.
Before I can recover from my surprise, he leans down, sweeps up the mitts in one of his big paws, and straightens. But he doesnât give them back to me. He stands holding them like theyâre a prized possession and heâll only hand them over for a steep price.
âYouâre back. I mean, youâre here. Whatâre you doing here?â
Not exactly neighborly, but I thought Iâd never see him again. I thought Iâd never have to deal with the hysterically shrieking hormones his presence always ignites.
Gazing at me steadily, he says, âI had business in Vegas. Thought Iâd drop by and say hello. I just got in.â
âDrop by? Vegas is an eight-hour drive from here.â
âI flew.â
âOh. I thought I just heard on the news that they stopped all the flights into Reno-Tahoe International due to bad weather?â
âThey did. Just not mine.â
He looks at me with such intensity, my heartrate skyrockets. âWhy not yours?â
âI was flying the plane. I ignored the call to reroute.â
I blink at him. âYouâre a pilot?â
âYes.â
âYou said you were a debt collector.â
âI am.â
âThis is confusing.â
âIâm a lot of different things. It doesnât matter. The point is that I stayed away as long as I could. A little bit of fucking snow wasnât about to stop me from getting here.â
That sends a jolt of electricity straight through me.
I want to pretend I donât know what he means, but I do.
This beautiful, strange, magnetic man has just informed me that heâs thought about me as much as Iâve thought about him, that he tried to fight the urge to come back here from wherever he went, and that he thinks returning is a bad idea for whatever reason, but has resigned himself to it nonetheless.
We stare at each other until I regain my senses and invite him in out of the snow.
I close the door behind him. He makes the room feel crowded because heâs just so big. I wonder if he has to custom order all his furniture. And clothes. And condoms.
Best not to think about that now.
We face each other in my small foyer made even smaller by his bulk and simply look at each other.
Finally, he says, âSomething smells like itâs burning.â
âThatâs just me thinking. You never put your house on the market.â
âNo.â
âYou said youâd put it on the market within a few weeks after you left.â
âYes.â
âWhat happened?â
His voice drops. âYou happened.â
Surely my gulp must be audible. I will my hands to stop shaking, but they ignore me.
He says, âYou never called.â
âMy roof never leaked.â
The ghost of a smile lifts the corners of his lips. It vanishes when he says, âWhat happened with Deputy Dipshit?â
âWe havenât talked since that day you nearly ripped off his head.â I pause. âDid I ever thank you for that?â
âNo thanks were necessary. Itâs a manâs job to protectââ
He cuts off abruptly and mutters, âFuck.â Then he looks away and says gruffly, âI should go.â
Heâs uncomfortable. Iâve never seen him uncomfortable.
Itâs oddly appealing.
I say softly, âYou canât just show up out of the blue and leave ten seconds later. At least stay for a cookie.â
His gaze slides back to mine, and now itâs heated. âI donât want to keep you.â
He says it like thatâs exactly what he wants to do: keep me.
If my face gets any redder, heâll think Iâve burst a vessel.
Then he backtracks. âYouâre baking cookies?â
âYes. Well, theyâre probably hockey pucks by now because my ovenâs a piece of junk, but Iâve got another batch ready to go.â
âYou bake?â
A prick of irritation makes me frown at him. âWhy is that so surprising? Do I look like Iâm incapable of operating a kitchen appliance?â
âIâve never met a beautiful woman who bakes.â
I find that even more irritating. Because one, I donât like backhanded compliments, two, skill with baking has absolutely nothing to do with a womanâs looks, and three, he makes it sound like beautiful women are draped all over him wherever he goes.
Which they probably are, but still. I donât like the idea.
I say tartly, âAnd Iâve never met an eight-foot-tall debt collector who launders money through real estate and flies a plane into a closed airport during a snowstorm, so weâre even.â
He grins. Itâs breathtaking. He says, âSix-foot-six. Are you the jealous type?â
I think about it. âI donât know. Iâve never had a man do something to make me jealous. Are you the type who enjoys making your girlfriends crazy by flirting with other women?â
In his pause, I sense an ocean of darkness.
He says gruffly, âI donât have girlfriends.â
How are we standing closer? I donât remember moving, but my feet must have a mind of their own, because suddenly, weâre only inches apart.
Holy Ghost of Christmas Past, this man smells divine. My heart beating madly, I say, âAre you married?â
Staring at my mouth, he says, âYou know Iâm not.â
Yes, weâve already discussed this, but I wanted to make sure he didnât acquire a Mrs. Dangerous Alpha since I last saw him a few months ago.
âWork keep you too busy?â
âSomething like that.â
âHmm. So itâs only one-night stands for you, then?â
His gaze drifts back up to mine. He takes his time, looking over my features, until our eyes meet again.
It feels like being plugged into a socket.
In a throaty voice, he says, âNo one-night stands. No girlfriends. No anything since I first laid eyes on you.â
We stare at each other in blistering silence until the smoke alarm starts to scream.
Because my nerves are already stretched thin, I jump at the sound. Then I run into the kitchen. Itâs filled with smoke. Coughing, I pull the door open and wave away the smoke that billows out into my face.
Behind me, Kage says, âMove.â
Heâs thrown his wool overcoat onto a kitchen chair and put on the oven mitts. The tight black short-sleeved T-shirt heâs wearing shows off his impressive collection of tattoos and muscles, so much so that I have to look away so he doesnât catch me gaping.
I step aside and let him grab the baking sheet with its smoking, blackened cookies from the demon oven, then watch in admiration as he calmly closes the oven door, hits the fan button on the top of the range, and sets the baking sheet onto the stovetop.
âTrash?â
âUnder the sink.â
As the smoke gets sucked into the fan, he opens the cabinet under the sink, pulls out the trash can, and grabs a spatula from the crockery pot on the counter. Then he scrapes all the burnt cookies off the cookie sheet into the garbage.
âYou should use aluminum foil to line the pan. It makes for easier cleanup.â
Maybe he watches The Food Network in between beating up his boxing bag and flying through snowstorms and going around being ridiculously sexy.
I say drily, âThank you, Gordon Ramsay. Iâll be sure to try that next time.â
He pauses for a moment over the trash, then returns the empty cookie sheet to the stove, removes the oven mitts, and tosses them onto the counter, and turns to me.
Approaching me, he says softly, âInterrupting me is one thing that will get you taken over my knee, beautiful girl. Sass is another.â He looks at my mouth and moistens his lips.
Can you faint and still be standing up?
Equal parts alarmed and turned on, I back up until my butt hits the kitchen table. Then I stand there, wide-eyed. He prowls closer and closer until weâre nose to nose and Iâm staring up into his eyes.
Heâs silent. Waiting. Giving off heat like a furnace.
I blurt, âHeâs a Michelin-starred chef, though. So it was really kind of a compliment.â
Seeing my anxiety, he murmurs, âPlease donât be afraid of me. I told you Iâd never hurt you. That was the truth.â
Iâm breathing like Iâve just run a timed sprint, so itâs a little hard to answer. âItâs not fear. Itâs nerves. Youâre veryâ¦â
I canât think of a good enough word until I remember what Sloane called him the night we met. âUndomesticated.â
His smile comes on slowly. âNow that was a compliment.â
âItâs what my girlfriend called you that night at Downriggerâs when you told me you werenât a knight in shining armor.â
âYour girlfriend the confident brunette?â
âThatâs the one.â
He tilts his head and considers me. âDid she tell you she hit on me when you went to the bathroom?â
âYes.â
âAnd that I wasnât interested?â
âYes. And to be honest, neither one of us could believe it.â
âSheâs a pretty girl. But there are a million pretty girls in the world.â He lifts his hand and lightly touches my cheek. His voice softer, he says, âThereâs only one of you.â
I exhale, hard, and close my eyes. âYouâre killing me here.â
âTell me to go, and I will.â
âI really donât understand whatâs happening.â
âYes, you do.â
âI told you I didnât think a fling would be good for me.â
âI donât want a fling.â
When I open my eyes, I find him staring down at me with such intensity, it takes my breath away.
He murmurs, âI want everything you have to give, Natalie, for as long as you want to give it to me.â
Knees, donât you dare give out on me now. Sounding as desperate as I feel, I say, âWe barely even know each other.â
âWe know enough. And weâll know more the more time we spend together.â
When I donât respond, he says, âBut youâre going to have to make the first move.â
I blink so slowly, Iâm sure it looks comical. âWait. What?â
âYou heard me.â
âYou donât consider everything youâve said to me since I opened the door to be making the first move?â
An amused smile curves his lips. âFair enough. Youâll have to make the second move, then. I wonât pressure you. Itâll be on your timetable, not mine.â
âIt?â
âUs.â
He says it like itâs an absolute. An inevitability. As if heâs been to the future and had a good look around, and now is back here just waiting for me to get on board with the program.
If thereâs one thing I really dislike, itâs being taken for granted.
Staring him right in the eye, I say, âSorry in advance if this insults you, Romeo, but if your arrogance were nuclear energy, it could power the entire universe.â
After a beat, he throws his head back and laughs.
It startles me so much I plop right down onto the kitchen table.
He laughs and laughs, his broad chest shaking, his hands clutching his stomach, until finally he sighs and looks down at me, shaking his head.
âYouâre adorable when youâre angry.â
âDonât make me kick you in the shin. Iâve got a temper, just so you know.â
Leaning down to brace his arms on the table on either side of my body, Kage gazes deeply into my eyes.
âGood. I want you to speak your mind with me. Tell me when Iâm out of line. Kick my ass if I need it. Because one thing I can guarantee you is that Iâm not an easy man. Iâm definitely gonna piss you off.â
I smile sweetly at him. âReally? Shocking.â
âSmartass.â
âOne hundred percent. I guess thatâs something you should know about me. Also, since weâre being so open and whatnot, Iâm not sure how I feel about the whole âtake you over my knee thing.â I donât like the idea of being spanked.â
âWhat if I could guarantee youâd like it?â
I resist the urge to roll my eyes. âThat is so something a man would say.â
He smiles. It looks dangerous. âWeâll table it for the time being. Any other pet peeves I should be aware of?â
His eyes are so filled with lust, I can barely concentrate. âIâll make you a list.â
He chuckles. âIâm sure you will.â
We stare at each other until he leans closer and puts his mouth near my ear. He whispers, âYou still have my number?â
âY-yes.â
âGood. Use it.â
He inhales against my neck, makes a sound of pleasure low in his throat, then straightens and grabs his coat off the back of the chair where he left it.
Then he leaves as abruptly as he appeared, closing my front door behind him.
When Mojo wanders into the kitchen a few minutes later, yawning, Iâm still sitting where Kage left me, feeling my heartbeat in every part of my body, feeling the slight brush of his lips against my neck on every inch of my flesh.