Beauty Dates the Beast(36)


“Did he kiss you?” Was that a note of strain in Beau’s voice?

I shot him an angry look to cover my lie. “Some guys are polite enough to not maul a girl on a date.”

Not Jason, but I’m sure there were some guys out there like that.

Silence. Then a smug “Good.”

It irritated and thrilled me at the same time. Thrilled that he was being possessive when it came to me … irritated that he was being such an ass about it. Damn it. My heart broke a little. I couldn’t have this. I couldn’t have him. “I can’t do this, Beau.”

“Don’t,” he said softly.

“I can’t be with you. I’m sorry.” My eyes burned with tears.

A few minutes passed in awkward silence, then Beau spoke again. “I need your help, Bathsheba. You’ve met a lot of Alliance members at your job, right?”

It seemed an odd question. “I guess so.”

“And all applications are done in person, correct?”

“Giselle uses in-person interviews, yes. Some of the customers are several hundred years old and slow to catch on to new technology.” Vampires were notoriously bad with computers and couldn’t type worth beans. “Why?”

“Because I need help identifying a few bodies.”





Chapter Seventeen





I must not have heard him correctly. “What?”



“I know it’s a lot to ask of you, but I need your help.”

My virginity was a lot to ask of me. This was just weird.

We rode in silence until the car pulled up at the medical examiner’s office. The parking lot was nearly deserted at this time of night. We went to the door, then rang the bell. After a few moments, the door buzzed and the three of us went in.

The technician who met us at the door looked rather familiar. He had Beau sign in. “Think she can do it?”

“Worth a shot,” Beau said calmly.

The lab tech led us down a long corridor to a door that said Morgue. “Give me just a moment to get clearance.”

The door shut and through it I heard “ … Bjorn … to see the dead girl …”

“… relation to the deceased?” another voice asked.

That made me nervous.

The door opened and the tech smiled, and I remembered where I’d seen him before—he was one of Beau’s men who had come to secure my house.

“Follow me,” he said, and Beau and I stepped inside. Ramsey stayed in the hallway.

The room was large and sterile-looking, with small white ceramic tiles covering the floor and a row of metal drawers lining the back wall. Our escort pulled out one drawer in a puff of refrigerated air. On the slab was a sheet-covered object just about the right size for a body.

Oh God. Even though I’d expected this, my knees felt a little weak.

“Steady,” Beau said, and his arm went around my waist.

The lab tech pulled back the sheet and exposed the face of the victim.

It could have been a wax Barbie doll; whatever was human about her had long fled. Her face was cold and gray, her features refined and pretty. Beautiful, even, but that wasn’t a surprise if she was in the Alliance. Her ears weren’t pointed, so that eliminated the chance of any sort of fey creature. Her blond hair was brushed back from her head, almost as pale and colorless as her skin.

Could I identify her? She looked vaguely familiar. I leaned in to Beau and whispered, “What is she?”

He whispered back, “Shifter. Don’t know what kind. She’s not from around here.”

That definitely narrowed down the field. Female shifters of any kind were rare, so most were snapped up right away. Which made Giselle’s business very difficult at times. “Any markings?”

The tech pulled the sheet down a little, revealing a tiny paw tattooed over the right breast. At the sight of that paw, I remembered. It was too tiny to be a wolf, the five small toes tipped with dainty claws.

“Mink,” I said. “Regina St. James was one of the few were-minks in the database. She showed me her tattoo once.” I stared down at the body. Lord, it didn’t look like Regina. She’d been so pretty, with a zesty, bubbly personality. This cold stranger wasn’t her. “She liked to date a lot. Giselle loved her.”

Our tech nodded and made some notes. “We’ll check with her family and see if she’s been reported missing.”

“Do you want to see the other body?” the other tech asked from the other side of the room.

Our small party headed over as she pulled out the slab. When she uncovered the face of this woman, I couldn’t tell who it was again. The face was rounder, sweeter than the last. Younger. The hair was a bright yellow-blond that made the pallor of her skin seem unnatural. Her figure was slightly fuller than the were-mink’s.

She had no identifying tattoos and she’d been found in the river, her scent long gone. They didn’t know what sort of shifter she was, or if she was one at all.

“I’m sorry,” I told them after a few minutes. “I don’t recognize her. I can check the records at work tomorrow, if that’ll help.” I glanced over at Beau, who was eyeing the corpse with a grim expression.

He glanced at me, then back down at the corpse. He looked murderous, intense, his eyes changing from normal to feline. “Both women are blondes. How long is the hair?” he asked the shifter tech.

The man checked a chart. “Mid-back on both.”

“How tall?” he rasped.

Again, the guy checked his chart. “One was five foot eight. The other was five nine.”

Beau’s mouth thinned into a line. “Both tall with long blond hair.” His gaze focused on me. “They look like you.”

I frowned. And as I stared at the second corpse, I felt pricklings of alarm.

“How did they die?” I asked.

The tech shook his head. “We don’t need to get into that at the moment—”

I’d suspected something like that. I grabbed the sheet so I could see the rest of the body, not just the face, which looked a little too similar to mine with every moment.

Beau put a hand over mine, halting me. “Bathsheba,” he said in a low voice. “You don’t want to see. She’s … parts of her have been eaten.”


Beau refused to let me go home that night. I protested all the way to the Worthington Hotel, but Beau got his way.



“Leave Giselle a message,” he said calmly. “It’s not safe there for you right now. Not with someone hunting tall blondes.”

I was a little scared, too. After all, whoever had been in my house a few days ago was hunting me, too, as well as that scary creature.

And I felt safe with Beau.

My panties weren’t safe, but the rest of me was, at least.

“You should take me to where Sara is. This isn’t safer than that,” I complained as we went through the massive lobby.

I vividly remembered the last time I’d stayed here. He’d wrapped his body around mine, and I’d snuggled into the musky scent of him. My nipples grew hard with longing just thinking about it, and Beau gave me a hot look as we reached the room door.

“Why do you keep doing that?” I whispered, jamming the key-card into the electronic lock. It gave a silent click and the light flicked to green. I shoved the door open.

“Doing what?” His voice had a tense edge to it.

“Look at me that way … sometimes.” I couldn’t explain that it happened when I thought dirty things about him. “It’s almost like you can read my mind.”

“I can’t read your mind,” he said, his tone mild.

The door clicked shut behind us and he pulled me against the wall, his hard body pressing against mine.

“But I can smell you,” he said softly, and his lips brushed mine. My body thrilled at the contact, and my breath left me. His finger slid down my cheek, caressing me. “Ever since we made love in the cabin, I can smell the softest things about you—what kind of perfume you wear, the shampoo you use, the detergent you use to clean your underthings.” His nostrils flared and I realized he was smelling me right now. “I can smell when you get turned on. I’m attuned to your scent. I could pick you out across a room.”

A hot blush covered my face. Oh my God. “You can smell that?” Was that what he was sensing every time he gave me that odd look?

He pressed against me, demonstrating the thick erection in his pants. “I’m half-wild with wanting you.” His mouth captured mine. “I catch whiffs of your arousal and it drives me crazy with desire. I hunger to taste it on the air again, to know that you’re thinking of me.” His hands dropped from me suddenly. Then, slow, and almost unsure, “Are you thinking of me? Or someone else?”

“I’m thinking of you,” I said softly.

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