Pyromancist (Seven Forbidden Arts 1) - Page 71

“She’s Japanese, you ignorant bastard. Where can I find her?”

“She lives in the block next door,” he said in a nasal voice. “Rooftop.”

Joss swiped a finger over the man’s hand, catching a drop of blood. The cleaner stood frozen. Both men looked on with big eyes when Joss licked his finger clean. The asshole was telling the truth.

Joss kept his weapon trained on the man as he rounded the bar and headed for the door. “You can take this as her resignation.”

The man mumbled an insult, but Joss was in too much of a rush to get to Clelia to care.

He hurried to the building next door, preparing to fight in case the men from the bar had warned the doorman, but there was no concierge. From the reception desk where he was required to sign in, he gathered it was a business block. He glanced at the plaque on the wall and chose the floor number of a recruitment company to sign next to his fictional name, not that the receptionist was paying attention. He was too busy watching a rugby match on a portable television.

Joss took the fire escape. When he exited on the rooftop, he looked around for a penthouse level, but there was only a loose-standing unit that resembled an engine room, the type that held geysers and wiring. It couldn’t be this.

He carefully rounded the room. The only window faced away from the street. The curtain was drawn. Next to the door stood a camping chair and a pot with flowers. At the signs of habitation, Joss’s gut clenched in anticipation.

His pulse throbbed in his temples when he tried the knob. The door was locked. If this was indeed where Clelia lived, would she let him in? No chance in hell. After his performance in France, she was sure to have trust issues. Knowing he knew what she was, she’d believe he was here to hunt her, which, in a way, he was. He wasn’t taking any chances.

It took him three seconds to pick the cheap lock. He cursed for how easy it was, his chest constricting at the knowledge of how effortless it could’ve been for anyone else. He turned the knob, careful to be quiet. The door squeaked when he pushed it open. It needed oil.

He paused in the frame for a heartbeat to take in the scene. The squeaking had woken the woman who’d been asleep on the bed. She shot upright, her face alert like someone who never slept too deeply, someone on the run.

The vise around his ribcage gave marginally. He dragged a deep breath of the stale, humid air inside the room into his lungs. She was here. She was alive. He took her in with greedy eyes. Clelia was dressed in a short, black skirt and white blouse. Her hair was braided and tied with ribbons, making her look impossibly young and vulnerable. Perspiration shone on her forehead. The room was like an oven. He registered everything with a single glance—the dingy interior, the peeling paint, the two-plate stove on a table against the wall, the bathroom cubicle in the corner, and the fear in her eyes.

He closed the door with a soft click. She squirmed up the mattress, pressing her back against the wall.

“Relax,” he said. “I’m not here to hurt you.”

“How did you find me?” she whispered.

Anger roiled through him, only buffered by his relief. “Does it matter?” Moving to the bed, he said, “I told you to never run from me.”

When she stared at him with those huge eyes, he wanted to strip her and fuck her just to be sure she was real. He controlled himself with much effort, doing no more than reaching out to touch her face, but she winced and flattened herself against the wall. Her reaction was expected, by all means normal, but it grated on him. This was going to take some patience.

He dropped his hand. “I told you I’m not here to hurt you.”

“What then?” Her voice shook. “To question me? To lock me up?”

Sitting down on the edge of the bed, he shook his head with a disapproving smile. “Why didn’t you tell me about your art?” This time, when he brushed a damp tendril of hair from her forehead, she didn’t pull away. “That was naughty of you, little witch.”

She lifted her chin, her dainty nostrils flaring. “Are you going to kill me?”

“All I could think about since the day you ran was sinking inside you and taking what I’ve missed the first time.” He gave her a level look. “So no, I’m not going to kill you.”

“Is that why you’re here then? To fuck me?”

Damn her. His cock stirred. “First, little girl,” he said, twisting her braid around his fist, “I’ll make love to you.” He let his smile stretch, the gesture calculated and cold while his body ran hot. “Then I’ll fuck you.”

Tags: Charmaine Pauls Seven Forbidden Arts Fantasy
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