Full Moon Rising (Riley Jenson Guardian 1)
Page 23
After an hour of tossing and turning, I gave up and got up. I pulled on my favorite Marvin the Martian T-shirt to ward off the slight chill in the night, then headed into the kitchen and grabbed a large glass of milk and the jar filled with chocolate chip cookies. Then, from the well-padded comfort of my favorite armchair, I ate, drank, and watched the night give way to a brilliant red dawn. When the sky show was over, I typed up my report on Rhoan's laptop, then e-mailed it to Jack. The phone rang a second later
I leaned back in the chair and grabbed the receiver off the wall. "Hi, Kel."
Husky laughter drifted down the line. Kelly had one of those voices that would have made her an instant hit on the phone-sex lines. "And how did you know it was me?"
"Because I left a message on your phone, and because everyone else knows better than to ring me at this unholy hour of the morning."
"And yet you are up, which means you have a problem." She hesitated. "Is it just a desperate need for sane feminine conversation? Or is it something more serious, like needing that all-dick, no-brain of a mate taken off your hands?"
I grinned. Kelly didn't like Talon any more than Rhoan did, but at least she could see the benefits of keeping him around. Men as well hung as Talon weren't all that common. "Actually, I just had a question."
"Well, damn. I wouldn't have minded a bit of well-endowed werewolf action right now. But ask away."
"Did you talk to Rhoan before he left? Have you any idea where he was headed?"
"No, and no. Why?"
"I've just got a feeling he's in some sort of trouble."
"Not the sort that has taken ten of our number already, I hope?"
"No. Not yet, anyway."
"Good." She paused. In the background was the soft ticking of a clock, meaning she was in her quarters at the Directorate. The only clock in her own home was the mother of all grandfather clocks. It was so large - and so loud - that I was forced to leave the room when it chimed. "I'm due to go out again tomorrow night. I'll see what I can find if he's not back by then."
"Thanks. I owe you one."
"Get me into a club during the moon fever, and we'll call it quits."
I grinned. "Done deal. See you later."
"Arrivederci, bella."
I replaced the receiver, then rose and headed back to the kitchen
I wasn't the world's greatest cook, and most days I tended to burn whatever it was I was cooking. But I could usually manage muffins, eggs, and bacon without too much damage. Luckily for my stomach, it was one of those days. As I dished it all up, I glanced toward the door and wondered if my naked vamp wanted anything to eat. Not that I intended offering myself. Rhoan always kept a good supply of synth blood in the fridge, simply because he needed it. We might be twins but I was more werewolf, my brother more vampire. He didn't have the extendable teeth, ate and drank normally, and could walk in sunlight as well as I, but when the full moon began to rise, so too did his need to consume blood
I grabbed a synth pack from the fridge, then picked up my plate and walked across to the door
My grubby but sexy vampire was sitting where I'd left him, in the shadows to the right of my door
"Have you eaten?" I asked
Surprise flickered through his eyes. "Are you offering?"
I grinned and tossed the plastic pack to him. "Hardly. But my flatmate always keeps a stock of synth blood. You're welcome to that."
He caught the pack deftly in one hand. "Thank you. It's most considerate."
"In other words," I said dryly, "the offer sucks, but you'll make do."
Humor touched his luscious lips. "You are very adept at reading people, aren't you?"
Only nonhuman races, and only because of what I was. I shrugged, and sat, cross-legged, on the safe side of the doorway. Even though he was a stranger, and probably up to no good, he was at least someone to talk to. While the lone wolf image wasn't one that fitted most wolves, it did apply to both Rhoan and me. We'd grown up in an environment that was hostile to our presence - to our very existence - and had become used to keeping to ourselves. Which meant, of course, that the art of making friends easily wasn't a skill either of us had. God, it had taken me forever to drop my guard and let Kelly in a little. We'd known each other for three years, and despite the fact that I called her a friend - a good friend - she still had no idea that Rhoan and I were related, let alone twins
And while I had two mates I saw regularly, they weren't exactly friends. Melbourne could be a cold city when you were basically alone
His gaze slid down my barely covered bits - a touch that wasn't a touch, but left me burning. No surprise there. The moon heat, which was what we wolves called the weeklong phase in which the need to mate became almost all-consuming, had started. And while it didn't affect me anywhere near as strongly as full-blooded wolves, the burning need for sex was still hard to deny