The Keepers
Page 15

 Heather Graham

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She cried out, dragging him to her. Their lips met again as he entered her, drawing her long legs around him, sinking together so completely that he felt as if they were sharing their very beings. All that had been slow became desperately fast, subtle became bold, and they seemed to both give way before something so urgent it was almost cruel, and yet there was still time for kisses of liquid fire, caresses and whispers as tender as the softest breeze.
He held himself in check as he held her, felt her shudder and jerk and climax, and at long last he allowed himself to release the shattering volatility that he had held in check, the entire world darkening and then exploding along with him. She fell against him, drenched and liquid, spent and limp, and he held her, feeling as if he actually had a heart himself, one that hammered along with hers as they both eased down from the pure carnal ecstasy of incredible sex.
Together, they lay entwined on the bed, with the soft white light slowing bringing the world into focus again. He didn't want to leave--ever.
She stirred against him. He slipped an arm around her, drawing her head down to his chest, gently threading his fingers through the tangled mass of her hair, marveling at the color in the light. Where she went, he thought, there was sun. A sun that didn't burn or hurt, just brightened the world.
She could be the most infuriating individual in the world. Stubborn. Pig-headed, actually. But being with her was amazing. Making love with her was even more amazing. Lying beside her, just being near her...
He must be insane. Being with her was the most wonderful experience in his memory, in his life, in his death...in his entire existence. But he needed to be careful. His emotions were running rampant.
He didn't care. He didn't think all the powers in heaven or hell could have stopped him from making love to her tonight.
And then he stopped, amazed at the tenor of his own thoughts. He was a vampire.
And he was falling in love.
She moved slightly, getting more comfortable against him.
He wondered if she realized just what they might have to face as he continued to stroke her hair in silence. Then, he couldn't stop himself.
"Are you sorry?" he asked softly.
She shook her head. "No...actually, I haven't felt this...I don't know...so..."
"So...what?" he asked, setting a finger on her chin to lift her face so that she had to look at him.
She was smiling. "I was about to say 'at peace.' I haven't felt so at peace in years. But I didn't want you to think that your lovemaking was peaceful. I mean, I'm not sure that would be a compliment, and I wouldn't want to insult you. At all." She was suddenly flushing, but he laughed, not in the least bit offended.
"I won't take it as an offense against my masculinity, I promise," he assured her.
Her smile suddenly faded. "I want you to know...I mean, I have no expectations. I...don't think I meant to do this when I let you walk me home tonight. I...I don't mean to intrude on your life. I mean...I do, as far as discovering what happened goes. So far..."
"So far," he said firmly, wrapping his arms around her, "so far, there's nothing we can do until morning. Tonight...tonight, I'm in awe, and I don't want to give up a minute of the time that's left."
"I think it's already starting to get light."
"Then hush, and let me love you."
Fiona awoke with his words echoing in her mind.
Of course, he hadn't meant it as "love." He'd meant it as "make love." But still, she believed with her whole heart that there was something between them more than sex. She really hadn't wanted to want him.
But she had. And she did.
She'd dreamed about him.
She'd felt a pang when others had talked about him.
She had admired him.
But he was a vampire, and she shouldn't have been with him.
Why not? It wasn't forbidden. Just because her parents had died to stop a war because beings from two different societies had fallen in love...
Hadn't they learned from that war? People were people, even when they were creatures of the night or the underworld. Surely they had learned that society's dictates could never control the heart.
After all, look at her. She was lost in a whirlwind over him. Falling deeply. She didn't have affairs; she had never been the type. Sex was the most intimate act possible between a man and a woman, and she had never taken it lightly.
But...
She didn't even know how old Jagger DeFarge really was, or how long he had existed, or...
If he knew how to feel emotion.
She started to roll over, certain that he would still be there, when she was stunned as her door flew open.
She pulled up her covers, suddenly self-conscious.
Jagger was gone.
But Caitlin, wearing a look of pure fury was standing in her doorway.
Chapter 6
"Oh, my God!" Caitlin said. And then again, "Oh, my God!"
"Excuse me, what happened to knocking?" Fiona demanded."When did we ever knock?" Caitlin said, then gave her anger free rein again. "I would think, if there was a need to knock, you would have told me!"
"Would you excuse me?" Fiona said, ignoring her and wanting only to get away to think--about Caitlin's words, Jagger's absence. "I'd like to grab a shower."
"A shower? You need to be decontaminated," Caitlin snapped.
"What?"
"You were with--you were with Jagger DeFarge!" Caitlin said.
How did she know? Fiona was certain that her sister hadn't seen Jagger. She was positive. He never would have put her into that position. He could be far faster than any speeding bullet. Even if he had been sound asleep, with his acute hearing, he would have known when Caitlin twisted the knob, and he would have been gone, rather than let her sister catch him there.
"Caitlin, this isn't really any of your business," Fiona said.
Caitlin stared at her, her jaw clenched. Finally she spoke icily. "I'm afraid that, because of who we are, it is very much my business."
Then she slammed the door and was gone.
Ruing the situation--but never the deed--Fiona hurried into the shower. Afterward she brushed her teeth, dressed quickly in a soft knit halter dress, grabbed her sandals and sped down the stairs. A glance at her watch assured her that she hadn't missed opening time at the store--again--and that her sisters would be at the breakfast table.
Caitlin might have been angry, but Shauna was just amused.
"Ah, there she is at last. The fallen woman. Thank God! I've thought for a very long time that you needed to get in bed with somebody," Shauna said.
"But a vampire!" Caitlin said, almost spitting out the word.
"Does somebody want to run up to the roof and announce it to the city?" Fiona asked.
"Honestly, Fiona. I can't believe that in the middle of everything going on, you brought a vampire into our home," Caitlin said.
Fiona sighed and walked over to the coffeepot on the buffet. Antonia--a shapeshifter--came and helped them out three days a week. She was a natural housekeeper and a warm mother figure. She'd been with them for over five years, after coming into the shop one day and overhearing them admitting that even between the three of them, they were having trouble keeping up with the house and the store.
Antonio made the best coffee in the world. It was strong and bracing, with a slight touch of pecan.
Fiona got her coffee, then turned to face Caitlin. She loved her sister so much, and she knew that Caitlin loved her, too. She hated it when they were at odds.
"August Gaudin has been coming here forever. Antonia is a shapeshifter and she might as well live here. They're good...beings. So is Jagger DeFarge."
"How can you say that? You hardly know him," Caitlin said.
"One way or another, we've known him forever, actually," Shauna said in Fiona's defense. "Caitlin, come on. The city trusts him. We might as well, too."
"None of us should become involved," Caitlin said quietly.
"Perhaps we shouldn't," Fiona said, walking over to where her sister was sitting at the dining room table.
"I'm sorry. Maybe I should have...maybe I should have told you both how I was feeling, but I didn't really know myself until...Look, that's not the point. We have to worry about the real problem here, not whether or not I choose to have sex, or with whom."
Caitlin inhaled a deep breath. "I'm trying not to overreact. Honestly." She took another deep breath and stood, her hands on her hips. "But the vampires started the war, the war that killed our parents, Fiona."
"They--they didn't start it alone," Fiona said.
"They started it over an affair--a love affair--between a vampire and a werewolf," Caitlin reminded them grimly.
"Well, there you go," Fiona said quietly. "I'm not a werewolf. And no one's going to war."
"Everyone will start to think that mixed affairs are all right," Caitlin said accusingly.
"Would that really be such a bad thing?" Fiona asked.
"Let me tell you why it's a bad thing," Caitlin said.
"It's not you or me or Shauna--it's not Jagger. It's the rest of the underworld. It's people. It's the world around us. I'm sorry, but the world is filled with prejudice, and that's simply the truth."
"Then shouldn't we work to change things?" Fiona asked.
Caitlin looked at her and sighed. "I don't want you to feel the hurt the world can dish out," she told her sister.
Fiona hugged her, suddenly at a loss for words.
"Get serious. Half the shapeshifters were drooling over him at that luncheon," Shauna said. "I think things are going to be fine. When is the wedding?"
"Wedding?" Caitlin gasped.
"Shauna! Stop, I beg you. There is no wedding," Fiona said. "Seriously, there's a killer out there, and catching him is my only focus at the moment."
"Except for having sex with a vampire," Caitlin noted sourly.