keywords: Holiday

Angler Christmas

Angler Christmas

Series: The Angler
Angler Christmas

Online short story

(between Bait and Catch)

Available from:
Published:
Genre: Paranormal. Romance.
Keywords: free. Holiday. short story.

GoodReads

Angler Christmas Two

Boredom shouldn’t be something to long for, but as I hung from our room balcony by my fingertips, blinded by Christmas lights, I dreamed of a day where I could do nothing.

“Let go. I’ll catch you.” Rurik’s harsh whisper grated on my nerves. We’d only been together a few weeks and this was the second time an old jilted lover of his tried to kill me.Vampires had long memories and their broken hearts didn’t mend. Of course, I’d have to be dating the most notorious heartbreaker in the northern hemisphere.

Sweat coated my skin. Don’t look down. Don’t look down! Our room was on the eighth floor. If he missed, I be a Connie shaped Picasso on the hotel’s pool deck. I looked down between my dangling legs. My heart stopped. I never said I was smart.

Rurik appeared small with his arms held out. “Come on, baby,” he whispered again.

“Don’t baby me.” My words came out as a furious hiss. I wanted to shout but the vampires who wanted to chop me into pieces were in the building trying to find our room. They didn’t need me making it easier for them. Why did I think things would go well dating Rurik? Really, did I believe we’d buy a house with a picket fence and no one would ever bother us?

The lock to our hotel room clicked open, the sound audible in Iceland’s quiet pre-dawn. After leaving Budapest, Rurik offered to show me the world. This was one of many ports we had traveled, and the second where one of his ex-lovers had tried to kill me.

Magdalena had sent Rurik an invitation to visit when we first arrived in the country and hadn’t taken it well when he had brought a date—me. We hadn’t stopped running since and we were on a freaking island. Not like we could just drive off into the moonlight, and she had all the airports watched tight.

I pried my gaze from the ground and listened to the room door crack open. Ah hell, I’ll only live once. Being caught by bad vampires up here or the bad vamp below, I’ll choose below. He, at least, loved me. Releasing my death grip on the balcony, I fell so fast I didn’t have time to utter a sound before landing with an oomph into Rurik’s solid arms.

He clutched me to his chest then ran with vampire speed from the hotel. The third place we’d hidden in as many days. “I had hoped Magdalena’s scorn would fade by now.”

“You must have made quite an impression on her.” I could comprehend her infatuation since I was under a similar spell. Rurik oozed sexual magnetism. With one glance, anyone who spotted him just knew in their gut he was a god in bed. Some men were just born gifted and Rurik had had centuries to hon his skills.

A smug smile was his response. Yeah, I thought so.

“Are any of your ex-lovers sane?” Spending the rest of my life looking over my shoulder sounded like a horrid future. I had run away with Rurik to find happiness, not to grow into Mrs. Paranoid.

“You can’t judge a vampire’s sanity by human standards.” He ran through the dark streets of Reykjavik toward the ocean. “She sees you as an obstacle. By destroying you, she thinks she can reclaim my affection.” He scowled. “Yes, she’s insane.”

I rested my head on his shoulder. Blaming Rurik wouldn’t help our situation. He didn’t break hearts on purpose. Or at least, I hope he didn’t…

In the distance, car engines sped closer. “Hurry,” I spoke into his ear. Rurik would do his best to protect me. He’d done it in Budapest, but one vampire against many didn’t offer me much defense. In their world, I was the equivalent of a kid’s juice box. Just one poke and they’d suck me dry. The added benefit of being Rurik’s blood slave only meant I didn’t age or sicken. I could still die, say by, being hit by a speeding vehicle.

“Look out!” I gripped his shoulders as a red sports car swerved around a corner and aimed in our direction.

Rurik leaped straight up in the air, and the car raced under us. He used the momentum of his leap to push against the building we’d been running next to, sending us over a stone wall. He landed, knees bent to the ground, taking the brunt of the impact. He raised his chin, his gaze riveted on the harbor. “Have you ever taken a cruise?”

I twisted around. A commercial cruise ship, lights dimly sparkling against the water, was moored to the dock. “No.” Until I had started working for slayers, I’d barely had enough money to feed myself let alone go on vacation.

“It’s time we changed that.” He carried me to the dock where he finally set me on my bare feet.

I tugged on my t-shirt, trying to cover my panties. There hadn’t been time to dress before leaping over the balcony. “I can’t board wearing this, and we don’t have our passports.” Or money.

What Rurik wore was no better. He’d hiked on a pair of jeans from the floor when he heard the bloodsuckers roaming the halls of the hotel. I’m not sure how he could tell the difference between them and humans, but he could. Good thing we’d just crawled into bed and hadn’t been asleep yet.

Resting his arm across my shoulders, he led me to the gangway. “I’ve got this covered. Watch.” The turn of phrase made me smile. It was something I said frequently. Seemed like I was rubbing off on him.

“How do you plan on getting us on board?” I leaned against his solid frame. Exhaustion pulled at my limbs. We’d been at this for days and unlike Rurik, I needed more than a couple of hours of sleep a day.

“Follow my lead, Rabbit.” He used my pet name. I’d stab anyone else who called me a rabbit, but Rurik had won the right. He’d given it to me since my job required me to run for my life often. We hurried onto the ship where we were met by a sleepy security crew of two. Rurik caught their gazes with his vampiric powers. “Do you have any empty suites?”

The guards’ dreamy stares moved to the computer screens. “This shows that the Tiny Dancer, the Solarium, and the Show Stopper are not in use.”

Rurik gave him a slow blink and glanced at me.

I shrugged. This was his idea. I hadn’t a clue what those names meant. “Not the Solarium.”

He chuckled. “We’ll take the Show Stopper. Log us in as if we boarded on the departing port as Mr. and Mrs. Miller.” Rurik held out his hand as the officer offered the keycards and gave us directions.

“That’s a neat trick.” I followed Rurik through the empty halls decorated for the holidays complete with massive Christmas tree as a center piece. With our constant moving, I hadn’t had time to buy Rurik a present. What a sucky first Christmas together. “How long will the effects last?”

“They won’t fade. They’ll remember us as the Millers who boarded on the original departure date. There are limitations though. Other crew might question our presence or ask for papers. We should keep a low profile.” He took us to an elevator to the top floor. “So room service only and no extravagant charges.” He glanced at my outfit. “Except some clothes.”

“No vampire attacks either.”

He shot me an annoyed look. “No.” The elevator opened and he stormed ahead to unlock our suite. “After you.” He bowed.

I swept into the room and stalled just over the threshold. The stars twinkled in the vast night sky, mirrored by the vast calm ocean. Huge windows lined all the walls, leaving little room to hide from the on-coming dawn. “Umm…where will you sleep?” The curtains didn’t look thick enough to block sunlight.

From behind, he wrapped his arms around me. “The bathroom. Wouldn’t be the first time, I’ve spent the day hiding in a tub.” He sighed. Sleeping in a cold tub was not comfortable.

I leaned against him, scanning the king sized bed and elegant living room space. “We stowed away in style.”

“Only the best for you.” He kissed the top of my head.

“Will we be safe here?” Magdalena’s vampires had tracked us across the country. Relentless in their effort, they found us in each hiding spot after a few days. Even the airports had been guarded so why hadn’t there been vampires at the dock?

He shrugged. “I thought we would be safe at the last hotel but look how that turned out. Magdalena’s spies are very thorough.”

“We didn’t leave her any credit cards or names to trace this time.” The edge of the horizon became more defined as we watched the approaching dawn. “We should get off at the next port and fly a good distance in any direction. Is there any country where I won’t be hunted by an ex-lover?”

He stayed silent, holding me in his steel grip.

I glanced over my shoulder.

He aimed another smug smile in my direction. “I doubt it.”

I elbowed him in the stomach and pointed to the bathroom. “Off you go before you get sun kissed.” Or booted in the ass.

“I didn’t know Magdalena had moved to Iceland or that she still carried feelings for me. It’s been decades since we’d been together and we had lived in present day Turkey.”

“I know, I know. It’s not your fault women trip over themselves to stab me in the back to get to you.” Yet I couldn’t help but feel betrayed. I turned away from him. Come on, this was the second time in less than three months. His track record sucked. What did that mean for our future?

“Order yourself some breakfast and clothes.” He kissed my cheek before retreating into the windowless bathroom.

Shoulders slumped, I sat on the edge of the bed. I didn’t want to join Rurik’s crazy ex-lovers fan club. Was this his hobby? Woo some lovesick girl then dump her when things go serious? Nausea rolled in my gut, or maybe I was hungry. I rubbed my stomach and curled into a ball on the bed. I didn’t have the energy to order room service. Sunlight crested over the water in a beautiful display of oranges and pinks.

The world had once been so big. Sometimes I missed being naïve about the existence of vampires. I wasn’t sure how long I stared out the window, but when I blinked, the sun hovered in the sky. Rubbing my eyes, I sat up and stretched. I was tired but I’d grown accustomed to sharing my bed.

A grunt came from the bathroom followed by Rurik shifting position in the tub.

I pulled the curtains closed but, as I had suspected, too much light filtered through. He would have to dodge sunbeams like security lasers. We couldn’t risk him getting burned when vampires hunted us. So I grabbed a blanket off the bed and knocked on the bathroom door. “Are you awake?”

“Yes.” He sounded miserable.

“Close the shower curtain so I can come in.” They should block any stray beam when I slipped inside.

“Done.”

I entered the bathroom with the blanket, shutting the door behind me. “Move over.”

He yanked the shower curtain open, his eyebrow quirked in a silent question as he scooted in the cramped tub.

I crawled into the narrow space—my body pretty much draped over his—and pulled the blanket over us. “Why aren’t you asleep?”

“I was going to ask you the same.” He held out a toilet paper flower. “I made you something. Merry Christmas.”

I laughed and set it in my hair. “You have many hidden talents.” I rested my head on his shoulder, ignoring the ache in my chest.

“Tell me.”

“What?” I sucked at hiding my feelings. I wore my emotions on my sleeve. Not to mention, Rurik could sense my thoughts when I didn’t shield my mind well. Being tired made me sloppy.

“Your whole profession before meeting me was being hunted by vampires. This Magdalena thing is bugging you more than it should. Why?”

I ran my tongue over my teeth, wishing I had brushed them before crawling in so close to Rurik. We’d promised each other no more secrets. This technically wasn’t one but he asked for my honesty. “How much longer before I become like her? Five years? Ten? One?”

“Never.” He answered so fast it gave me whiplash.

“What happened between you and her? And with—”

With his thumb under my chin, he tilted my face so our gazes met. “I never loved them and never uttered those words. Especially to Magdalena. She was a means to an ends at the time. I love you with all my heart and wonder how long before some other vampire will lure you from me.”

I snorted, but he didn’t laugh. “You’re serious?”

“I count myself lucky that I don’t have to share you with anyone.”

Sighing, I melted against him. “Never.”


Angler Christmas Two

Angler Christmas Two

Series: The Angler
Angler Christmas Two

Online short story


Available from:
Published:
Genre: Paranormal. Romance.
Keywords: free. Holiday. short story.

GoodReads

Angler Christmas One

Time moved faster now that I was mortal. After centuries of being a vampire it took the courage of one delicate human heart to give me a second chance at living.

And to be a father…

I kept to the shadows outside my daughter’s nursery, not wanting to disturb the monster hovering over her crib. Fisting my hands, I held my breath. The King of vampires could slaughter the island population, where I and Connie had made our home, with just a thought. Yet, a tiny infant girl held his heart so tight in her grasp it pained me to see him so vulnerable. Who knew how long Tane had been watching Margaret sleep? He hadn’t been in the house two hours ago when Connie had put her to bed.

The urge to protect her flowed so strong in my blood that sometimes I wondered if it gave my heart the strength to beat. Technically, I was a miracle. A vampire turned human. What did make my daughter?

“You’re thinking too hard.” In a blink of an eye, Tane stood in the doorway. His gaze grew heated, undressing me in a single glance. Power radiated from my lover and intoxicated me. Anticipation left me dizzy as my cock thickened.

I snorted. “It’s part of my allure.” I should have known he would sense my presence, no matter how quiet I tried to move in this new body. The link between us was strong ever since he’d saved my life with his blood. Like Connie, I now belonged to him. Though, I wouldn’t say that to her face. Connie doesn’t think she belongs to anyone and that we all belong to her.

“What’s taking Tane so long to get…” Speaking of the she-devil, Connie stormed down the hall of our small home and paused as her gaze dagger through both of us. “”I swear, if either of you wake her, there will be no hole deep enough to hide from me.” Her cloud curly hair seemed even wilder since Maggie was born. The bruised tender skin under her eyes came from lack of sleep and not abuse. She couldn’t have been more beautiful.

Gathering her in my wake, I guided her back to family room where Christmas had exploded on every surface over the last week. “Drink.” I set my hot apple cider in her hand. She had it shipped in yesterday in memory of her grandmother. “Sit.” I pushed her into a plush chair. “You’re doing too much.”

Tane wandered into room and poured himself a cup. “I can assure you Maggie will sleep.”

“Did you do something to her?” Her voice rose and she held her cup more like a weapon than a drinking vessel. I couldn’t have picked a better mother for my child.

I rested my hip on the arm of the chair and kissed the top of her head. She tasted of cinnamon and walnuts. She’d been baking all afternoon and it seemed she’d doused herself with the ingredients. It took all my control not to laugh. I didn’t want her directing that sharp tongue in my direction.

“I’d never do anything harmful to our daughter. I merely peeked in her dreams.” He sipped his cider and stared at the Christmas tree.

Connie went very still and quiet. Never a good combination.

I glimpsed the sheen of tears in eyes. “Hey, what’s this?” With my thumb, I lifted her chin so she couldn’t hide.

She jerked her chin away. “It’s nothing.”

Tane frowned. He set his cup on the counter and knelt in front of her. “You know I’d never harm her.”

She nodded and wiped her cheeks. “I’m hormonal, not homicidal.”

Meeting my stare over her head, he asked. There’s a difference? Using our mind link.

I shrugged. Apparently.

“Stop talking about me.” She gave my thigh a painful squeeze but caressed his cheek. “That’s the first time you called her your daughter, Tane.”

He blinked. “Out loud, maybe, but I’ve always considered her mine.”

Connie visibly relaxed and took a long swig from my cup. “Okay, I need a shower. I won’t be long.”

“Famous last words.” I slapped her ass as she scooted between us. The pregnancy had enhanced her curves and it had been too long since we’d had time to let me explore them.

She vanished into our bedroom. I loved that word. Ours. It had made a world of difference when I’d abducted Connie all those years ago and added it to my vocabulary. Seemed like Tane was trying this word.

The ancient vampire strolled back into the kitchen assessing the plates piled high in various foods. “Are we expecting guests?”

“No.” I chuckled. “Connie is learning to cook.”

He picked up a piece of walnut cake, a local Christmas traditional dessert, and sniffed. “Is she any good?”

“No, but if you tell her I said that, I will deny it until I’m in my grave.”

“Smart man.” He grimaced. “Don’t joke about your grave. How are you adjusting?”

I shrugged again. “I like the sunshine.” This was Tane’s first visit to our Greek home since my transformation back to human. He needed to keep his distance from Connie as not to attract attention to her new human lover. If word spread that I still lived, the Nosferatu would rectify their error. Let alone the fact that Connie and Tane had made me human by sheer chance. “I hate being weak or needing to breath.” I popped a piece of cake in my mouth and grimaced. “I love the eating.”

Connie strolled out of our bedroom wrapped in a towel. Steam rose from her rosy skin. “He hates having to work out to keep the pounds off though.” She poked my stomach and I flexed so she would only sense the hard muscles. She was right. If not for the long hours swimming, I’d be twice my size.

“It would help if you’d stop baking.” I tugged at her towel, tired of playing nice. Maggie was asleep and I finally had both my lovers under the same roof. Tomorrow was Christmas and it would all be about family. Tonight, though, would be about remembering where the three of us had started.

She laughed and tugged the towel from my grasp. There had been a time she’d never have been fast enough to escape my advances. She leaned against Tane. “No matter how I try he’s still incorrigible.”

“I’d expect no less.” The vampire seemed more somber than usual. I didn’t need a mind link to sense his worry.

Returning to the family room, I settled on the chair Connie had vacated. I couldn’t reach out to my sources for information on the Vampire Nation. I’d been declared dead. My resurrection would be a death sentence to the three people I loved the most. The most difficult thing in my new life was not being the real me—the politician, the spy, the informant to most powerful creature on the planet.

Tane bent closer to Connie and inhaled. I remembered how she smelled when I’d been vampire. A deep well of dark emotions ran through my wife and drew vampires. It made her perfect bait. I made it my goal to fight off her ghosts by brightening her life with positive things. Had Maggie’s birth changed Connie’s scent? I made note to ask Tane in private.

“I thought we’d be in bed by now.” I gave them a wicked smile. The three of us shared dreams but nothing beat reality and Tane hadn’t tasted either of us in months. This alone would have concerned me, let alone the vampire’s grim mood. “What’s bothering you?”

Giving me a sharp look, Tane’s expression hardened. He straightened and set his cup on the counter.

Connie frowned in my direction, clearly not amused by directness. “Can’t this wait until after the holidays?”

“No.” I shook my head. “Are we in danger?”

Tane drew Connie into his arms and led her to the love couch across from me. He sat with her cuddled within his strong arms. “You’ve never been safe.” Seeing these once-enemies so close warmed my heart but his words sent the cold claws of fear into my spine. “Or I should say, not safe enough. It’s only a matter of time that my enemies discover Maggie’s existence.”

Connie closed her eyes, her jaw tightening with determination. “I thought this island was secure.”

“It is as secure as I can make except for one thing.” Tane’s gaze never left mine. “You’d be safer with a vampire living here.”

“Absolutely not.” I slashed my hand through the air to help make my point. “I would be found out.”

“I know.” Tane let those words hang in the air.

I blinked as the meaning sank in. “You want to make me vampire again?”

Connie opened her mouth as if to protest then clamped her lips closed so hard I heard her teeth clank. She stared at her hands clasped on her lap, knuckles white.

Tane stroked her hair. “Maggie would be safer with a vampire protector. I’ve come to make you the offer. I can send for a trusted friend to change you.”

“Why not me?” Connie’s quiet question caught me off guard. She’d never expressed the desire to become vampire. Suddenly, I didn’t want to see her as anything but human.

“Because Maggie will need one of you as human. Someone to meet her teachers and bring her to parties during the day.” Tane rubbed the bridge of his nose. “Rurik is the better choice. He’s been vampire. He knows the life and is the trained warrior.”

I leaned forward, resting my elbows on my knees. I caught her gaze with mine. “What do want me to do?”

She shook her head slowly. “I can’t make this decision. It’s your life. No matter what, I’ll still love you.”

I sighed and turned my stare to Tane. I wasn’t lying when I’d told Tane that I loved the sun. I worshipped the scorching heat and blue skies of our island home. The beat within my chest thrilled me and the daughter this new body had allowed us to create was the center of my universe. “We wouldn’t be able to have more children.” The realization weighed heavy on my shoulders. “What would you do?” I aimed my question at Tane.

He tilted his head to side. “You want more children?”

I nodded and Connie laughed.

The ancient vampire rubbed his chin. “I think we should leave this offer open. When you decide if it is best to become vampire again, I will make the arrangements. In the meantime, I think you should consider allowing a vampire to live among you. Someone tested and trusted.”

“Like who?” Connie rose from the love seat.

“I have someone in mind. I think we have spent enough time worrying.” Tane tugged her towel and it fell to the floor. “I agree with Rurik. We should be naked and fucking already.”

She gave us a salacious grin and strolled to the bedroom. “Who am I to disagree with such sag advice?”


The Broken Reed

The Broken Reed

Series: The Angler
The Broken Reed

Online short story

(Angler Christmas Three)


Available from:
Published:
Genre: Paranormal. Romance.
Keywords: free. Holiday. short story.

GoodReads

The Broken Reed

The local elementary school on our adopted Greek island of Alonissos held a yearly Christmas concert. All the music students from grade four through six would perform traditional Christmas carols tonight.

This would be Maggie’s first time performing. I squatted in front of my ten year old daughter, no easy feat in my heels. Smoothing her inky black hair, I stared in her ice blue eyes. She inherited Rurik’s colors but the rest was all me, including her temper. “Your dads are on their way and they assure me they won’t be late.” They’d better not be. I didn’t care if the vampire nation was in an up-roar. Family came first. Yes, two husbands. One human, one the vampire king. Lucky, lucky me. I owned a huge bottle of Tylenol.

Maggie shrugged and blew a test note on her oboe. The sharp noise it made scrapped my eardrums like cat claws. My daughter’s eyes grew wide with alarm.

I stuck my finger in my ear and checked for blood. “Nervous?” She usually played very well and was one of the advanced students in the band.

Pulling apart the mouth piece, Maggie examined her reed. She grasped the splintered, thin sliver of wood that should have been whole. “Mom?” Her voice held an edge of panic.

“I’m sure your teacher has an extra one.” I rose and searched the stage for said instructor. We arrived early with the other students to set the stage.

Maggie grabbed my hand and pulled. “This way.” She mobilized through the crowd of parents and children, parting them like a linebacker. “Miss Kasko!” she shouted.

An elderly woman with a beak of a nose stared over her glasses as our rushed approached.

“My reed broke.” Maggie held out her open hand to show her the evidence. She breathed hard and clutched my hand tight.

“Oh no.” The teacher met my concerned gaze. “I gave my last one to Theo. I don’t have any other spares.” With a shake of her head, she patted Maggie’s head. “I’m sorry. You can sit on the stage and pretend to play?” She turned away to scold a set of boys using their clarinets as swords.

Maggie blinked rapidly and her face flushed. “Daddy Tane’s never heard me play.” Her voice shook. Maggie spent a few weeks every summer with Tane at his Brazil home. I’d been exiled from the vampire nation for fifty years, which meant limited and secreted visits from my vampire husband. I wouldn’t let that stop him from having an active role in Maggie’s life. From what I’ve heard of their adventures, he crammed a year’s worth of fatherhood in that short amount of time. My heart ached. I wish somehow we could all be together as a family. I missed the asshole.

I clenched my jaw and cursed silently at my daughter’s broken heart. “I can fix this.”

She wiped her eyes before any tears fell. My daughter rarely cried and the sight killed me.

“We have reeds at home, right?” Now panic edged my voice.

She nodded. “In the kitchen drawer where you keep your crap.”

“Yeah, the crap drawer. Got it.” I turned to Miss Kasko. “How much time do I have?”

She glanced at her watch. “Thirty minutes.”

“Good. Daddy Rurik can pick it up on his way here.” Rurik, m y human husband and Maggie’s biological father, had gone to Patitri port on the other side of the narrow island to meet Tane’s private yacht. They should be in the car returning by now.

Maggie leaned against me, resting her head on my chest as I called Rurik. I absently stroked her soft hair as the phone rang.

“Oui, ma cher?” His tone was deep and smooth as silk. It sent a shiver down my spine. He’d started speaking French to me in hopes I’d pick up the language. I could say a lot of naughty things.

“Maggie’s reed broke. Can you stop at home for a spare?” Silence filled the air space between our cells. “Rurik?”

“There’s been an accident,” he answered.

The general noise of children and instruments being tuned faded from my attention. I grasped the phone closer to my mouth and spoke softly so Maggie wouldn’t hear the fear in my tone. “Is everyone all right?” My heart pounded. This would be the first Christmas since Maggie was born that we were all together. Ten freaking years was a long time.

Maggie lifted her chin, concern painted on her face. She was too perceptive.

“We’re fine. Can’t tell you about the goats though. The tow truck is ready to pull the goat truck out of the ditch so I think we should get to the concert in time without any pit stops. Can’t she play without it?”

I rested my forehead in my hand. “You took the back roads again?”

“They’re faster.” Sure they were if he didn’t hit a stray animal, get a flat or stuck behind another fool driving those dirt paths crisscrossing the hills of the island.

“Fine, just get here on time.” I hung up and met Maggie’s desperate stare. “I can fix this.”

Miss Kasko raised an eyebrow. “I’ll keep an eye on her. Better hurry.”

“Ok.” I kissed Maggie on the forehead and pushed my way through the on-coming crowd to my car. The night was darker due to a storm. I pulled my hood over my head and ran through the pouring rain. Thirty minutes, I could do this if I make every green light in the small town and bend the speed limit a little. We lived on the other side of the hill and I had to circle the base to reach our small villa by the sea.

Once I was out of the school zone, I pushed the old car faster. The hunk of junk belonged to Rurik who tinkered with it as an ongoing hobby. He swore one day I would love it. That day had not arrived yet. He took the good car, my car, to retrieve Tane. Leaving me with the Frankenmobile. It rattled and wheezed as I just squeezed past the first yellow light. At the next light, I had to make a sharp left. Through the headlights and windshield wipers, I spotted the green arrow change to yellow so I pushed the accelerator. As I made the turn, the car leaned far to the right and the engine hiccupped.

The Frankenmobile stalled and rolled back into the middle of the intersection. I watched the headlights draw close. Horns blared as cars weaved around mine from both directions. I was going to die if stayed here. Exiting the car, I slammed the door shut and scanned the area for help. The garages would be closed at this time of night. The cars whizzing past me wouldn’t see me in my dark jacket standing in a rain storm. I had to get out of the road.

I’d better call Rurik and Tane. Maybe they could magic me a tow truck. I searched my purse for my phone but came up empty. I must have left it on the passenger seat in my haste. I pulled the door handle. Nothing happened.

No. I. Didn’t.

I wiped the raindrops on the window and pressed my face to it. Oh yes, I did. The keys hung in the ignition and I had locked my doors by habit. I banged my head against the window. What now? Leave the car blocking the intersection until some yahoo smashed it to bits and possibly killed themselves before Christmas? Abandon my daughter at her first concert without a reed? I could fix this. I knew I could. I just need time and a crane.

“Come, we push the car.” A man’s voice yanked me from my misery. After ten years on this island, I could grasp basic Greek. He set his hands on the slick trunk and pushed.

Hurrying to his side, I helped move the car out of traffic. Rain soaked trough my jacket and trickled down my back. We managed to move it to the side of the road next to a moped rental shop. I handed him twenty Euros for helping me and raced into the shop.

He followed me. “Do you need a phone?”

“You work here?” I pulled back my hood. When I spoke Greek, I still had a strong New York accent.

“You’re Rurik’s wife?”

I nodded. “How did you guess?”

“Not too many blondes with American accents on the island in winter.” He grinned. “I’ve fished with your husband.”

“I need to get home fast. How much paperwork do I have to get through before I can rent a moped?” I explained my desperate situation.

“You going to drive in a rain storm on a moped for your kid?” He tossed me a key. “First one on your right outside the door. Bring it back in the morning. We can settle things then.”

The door slammed behind me before he finished speaking. I jumped on the moped and it purred to life as I turned the key. I’d driven one a couple of times around the island, playing tourist. Pulling onto the road, I squinted to see through the rain. Next time, I pack goggles in my purse for these types of emergencies.

I’d lost too much time. The road meandered around the hill and I needed to be on the other side ASAP. I had no choice. I’d have to take one of Rurik’s short cuts. Turning onto a dirt—road seemed like a poor description of what I drove on—more like a wide path that one vehicle could access at time. It cut across the vineyard Rurik financed and why he knew so many of these routes.

The back wheel of the moped spun in the mud and fishtailed, sending a spray of mud against my jacket. I gritted my teeth and wrestled with the handlebars to maintain my control. Five minutes later, I pulled through the private gate onto my driveway. We owned a white villa, complete with plastered high walls surrounding an inner garden with our own olive tree. I parked by the front entrance and wiped the mud splatter off my face. I couldn’t even tell how much time I had left. My phone was in the car and I didn’t own a watch. Oh, for a tardis. I’d have to take the dirt road on the return trip to make it time. Mud be damned.

I searched my purse for my keys to unlock the house door. The bottom dropped out from my stomach as the image of my keys dangling from the ignition of my car popped into my head.

No.

I paced, pulling my wet curly hair. Stupid. I hadn’t occurred to me that I needed the keys to get inside my house until now. How was I supposed to save Maggie’s day?

A rock in the flower garden caught my attention. I could break a window and climb inside. I took a step toward the projectile.

Whoa. The alarm system would go off and I pictured explaining the situation to the police. I hung my head. I didn’t have time to deal with cops. There had to be another way. My gaze landed on smaller stone at the edge of the stairs. The rain beaded on the fake plastic surface. The key hider!

Rurik had purchased this for me, knowing one day I’d be in such a predicament. He was so going to get a long, sweaty thank you. I unlocked the house, raced to the kitchen, retrieved the reed from the drawer, and hopped back onto the muddy moped. Revving the motor, I rolled off my property and headed up the short cut over the hill toward Maggie’s school. I would make it if I had to stop time itself.

Wiping the rain from my face, I scooted past my car parked on the side of the road. The tow truck driver was attaching his chains. Rurik would kill me.

I stopped at the entrance to the school, parking illegally. Running in my water logged heels and muddy clothes, I past a group of well-groomed mothers who sneered as my appearance. I hurried into the gymnasium.

Rurik and Tane stood by the stage with Maggie. She had her little arms wrapped around Tane’s muscled leg while he stroked her hair and Rurik knelt next to them while speaking quietly to her. Maggie’s eyes went wide as her gaze met mine and recognition finally dawned in them. “Mom?” she asked.

“Here you go, sweetie.” I handed her the reed. “Knock’em dead.” I could barely speak while trying to catch my breath. I really needed to start exercising again. There was a time I could almost out run a vampire. Now, I’d be lucking to beat a fat beagle.

Both my husbands stared, Rurik rising to stand and Tane set his hands on his hips while shaking his fedora covered head. It wasn’t to hide his baldness but to keep the locals from seeing his pointed ears. Vampires were still the world’s best kept secret.

“Thanks, mom.” She skipped onto the stage to join the band, settling on her chair and trying her new reed.

Rurik thumbed my cheek, coming away with mud. “I can’t leave you alone.”

“It’s a long story.” I wanted to puddle on the ground in relief. Mission accomplished. My daughter would play with the school, my husbands were in attendance, and we’d spend Christmas together. I’d done it.

Tane wrapped an arm around my waist, pulling me against his hard body. Boy, I missed him. He entered my dream nightly from his home on the other side of the world with his special mental abilities, but that would never make up for the real deal. Bending me back, he claimed a kiss. His full lips soft and demanding. He pierced my bottom lip with his fang and sipped.

I melted in his arms, letting him use his unnatural strength to support my weight.

Rurik chuckled. “Patience you two. That can wait until later, when there are no children to witness.”

Tane pulled away enough for our gazes to lock and he plucked a leaf from my hair. “I’ve missed you so much.”


Not His Christmas

Not His Christmas

Series: Not This Series
Not His Christmas
Available at Amazon

It’s Eoin and Angie’s first Christmas together and he wants to make it special. But his dragoness is lacking holiday spirit and doesn’t want anything to do with celebrating. Does Angie think Eoin is the type of dragon who could ignore her unhappiness? Clipping on his jingle bells and grabbing the mistletoe, Eoin is on a mission.


Available from: Amazon.
Published: 11/25/2017
Genre: Paranormal. Romance.
Keywords: Dragons. Holiday. Shifters.

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