Immortal Angel (An Argeneau Novel) Read online

Page 7


  “You shouldn’t be taking pictures while you’re driving. You could have got in an accident.”

  “We were stopped at the end of Marguerite’s driveway, waiting to turn onto the road when I took that picture,” she assured him with a faint smile, and then explained away the windblown effect by adding, “It’s windy today.”

  “Oh.” He nodded, but the tension in him didn’t ease much. He just couldn’t seem to relax for some reason. G.G. had no idea why. He wasn’t usually tense around women.

  “Have you had breakfast yet?” she asked suddenly, and he glanced her way in surprise, and almost wished he hadn’t looked. Damn, she was smiling at him so sweetly, her luscious lips curved up, red and wet, as if she’d just licked them, and he had the sudden urge to lick them too.

  “No,” he said finally, forcing his gaze away from her lips. “I slept in. I’ve only been up half an hour or so. Took a shower, made coffee . . .” He shrugged.

  “And fixed your hair,” she teased lightly, her gaze sliding up to the Mohawk he’d tended to and formed after stepping out of the shower. He’d had the Mohawk so long, that fixing it every morning was second nature, and now took only a couple of minutes to do. G.G. was used to the looks he drew with it, and hardly noticed them anymore. Usually. But right now, with Ildaria examining the tall straight strands, he found himself shifting uncomfortably and wondering—not for the first time—if he wasn’t getting too old for the style. But when he felt his face heat up a bit and realized he was actually blushing like a kid, he slid off the bar stool and started away from her, heading for the swinging doors, muttering, “I should grab some toast or something.”

  “Toast?” Ildaria exclaimed with dismay and he heard the tap tap tap of high heels behind him. With H.D. tucked under his arm like a football, G.G. couldn’t resist glancing back and down to see her shoes. He’d missed them on first greeting her, but now saw they were shiny, black, high-heeled pumps. Damn. She looked like a sexy secretary.

  “A big guy like you needs protein not just toast for breakfast,” Ildaria said now, drawing his gaze back up to her smiling face. “I’ll make you an omelet.”

  Grunting, G.G. turned and led the way into the Night Club’s tidy kitchen. It wasn’t as large as one would find in a mortal club, but it wasn’t tiny either. Most of the room was taken up with industrial refrigerators to store the blood, but there was also a grill, oven, microwave, and pots and pans dangling from a center rack.

  G.G. had renovated the kitchen when he’d taken it over. He worked from well before dusk, to long after dawn in the Night Club, and as a mortal, he had to eat. He hadn’t wanted to be running out to fast food joints for every meal, so a kitchen had been a necessity. Now, he paused and swung back toward Ildaria, absently petting the still snuggling H.D. as he took in her reaction to the kitchen.

  “Nice,” she pronounced, but her eyes were wide and glowing as she peered around the gleaming stainless steel surfaces. Returning her gaze to him, she raised her eyebrows. “So? An omelet. Si?”

  “I don’t want you to go to any trouble,” G.G. said mildly, but the mention of an omelet had made his mouth start watering, and he was glad when she went to check out the refrigerators, quickly finding the smaller one with food inside of it.

  “No trouble,” she assured him. “And look. You have the ingredients.”

  G.G. looked, but not at the eggs, cheese, onions, and peppers she was retrieving. Instead, his gaze landed and stayed on her bottom where her skirt had pulled tight over her generous curves as she bent to check the shelves.

  “How can I help?” G.G. asked, forcing his gaze away from her behind when she straightened.

  “Make toast,” Ildaria instructed, carrying what she’d found to the stainless steel prep table before returning to the refrigerator for milk.

  He watched her set the milk by the other ingredients, but when she grabbed a knife and began to clean and dice the vegetables, he set H.D. down and moved to fetch bread, butter, a plate, and a knife, before pausing to ask, “Have you had breakfast? Shall I get you a plate too?”

  “No. I’m good,” she assured him. “Marguerite makes big breakfasts every morning and I ate before we left.”

  Nodding, he carried the items to the counter where the toaster waited, and set everything down.

  They worked in silence for a minute, and then Ildaria asked, “So . . . you never did answer my question yesterday. How did a mortal end up owning and running an immortal Night Club?”

  G.G. looked around at that question, his gaze sliding over her figure as she worked. He would have expected her to ask Marguerite, or for Marguerite to volunteer the answer, but apparently not. Or perhaps she wanted to hear it from his point of view, so he divulged, “My mother and father bought it for me for my eighteenth birthday.”

  “Wow.” She kept her gaze on the knife as she quickly chopped the peppers, both red and green, he noticed. “I’ve heard of watches, bracelets, and even cars being given on special birthdays. But this is the first time I’ve heard of someone being given a business.”

  “Yeah.” G.G. made a face she didn’t see and quickly opened the bread. “It was a bit over the top. I paid them back for it as quickly as I could out of the profits.”

  “Really?” She turned to eye him with surprise.

  G.G. nodded, but didn’t comment further and turned his back to her to set four pieces of bread in the double toaster.

  Ildaria was silent for a moment, the only sound in the room the clack, clack, clack of the knife hitting the stainless steel surface, and then she commented. “You call Robert your father.”

  G.G. shrugged. “He’s the only father I know. I don’t remember my birth father. And Robert has been my dad in every way that’s important since I was five. That’s thirty-two years. He’s earned the title.”

  G.G. glanced over in time to see her nod and curiosity made him ask, “What about you?”

  “What about me?” she asked easily.

  “What about your parents?” he clarified. “Are they—?”

  “Dead,” she said, her voice flat. “Long dead.”

  G.G. considered that, but then asked, “They weren’t immortal?”

  “No.” Ildaria’s voice was almost hollow.

  “So you were turned at some point,” he said, frowning now as the memory of his mother’s screams of agony rang in his ears, and the vision of the skin on her face jumping and rippling as if it were boiling came to mind along with the way she’d clawed at her stomach, as if trying to tear it open. Robert had been trying to stop her, but she had been unstoppable and G.G. had fled at the first sight of blood appearing under her clawing fingers.

  “I was turned in a back alley in Punta Cana when I was fourteen.”

  The words drew G.G.’s mind from his memories and he peered at her sharply. Her voice sounded empty, emotionless on the subject. He frowned briefly, and then said, almost with disbelief, “Your life mate turned you in a back alley?”

  “He was not my life mate,” she said grimly.

  “A rogue turned you?” he asked, his brow furrowing with concern.

  “No. Si. I don’t know,” she said finally. “He was an asshole who attacked me, but I do not know if that makes him rogue.” After a pause, she admitted, “I turned myself, by accident, while fighting him off.” Sweeping the peppers up in her hands, she dumped them into a frying pan with butter and then plucked up the onion only to pause and purse her lips. “You like onions and peppers, don’t you?”

  “Yes,” he said at once, and watched her relax and start to work at dicing the onion now. He wanted to ask about the attack and how she’d accidentally turned herself, but she suddenly seemed . . . removed. As if she had shut down her emotions. It seemed better to wait. Besides, it had probably been something like how Jackie Argeneau had been turned. Jackie was a private detective and the wife of Vincent Argeneau, one of Marguerite’s nephews. Jackie had bit into an immortal’s arm during an attack, and then had held on, inadvertently sw
allowing the nano-filled blood as she struggled with her attacker. She’d got enough to start the change. An accidental turn you could say.

  The sound of the toast popping caught his ear, and G.G. turned to snatch the hot pieces of crusty bread out of the toaster. He dropped them on the plate and began to slather them with butter.

  “Do you have any brothers or sisters?”

  G.G. shook his head in answer, but then realizing she was watching what she was doing and not looking up to see the small movement, he said, “No. Only child.”

  “Your mother and Robert haven’t had a child of their own yet?” she asked with surprise.

  “Not yet,” he said easily, and then smiled faintly and added, “But I’m sure they will. I think my mother just wanted to wait until I was grown up. Or maybe they just wanted to enjoy each other for a while before getting into diapers and teething.” Finished buttering the toast, he set the knife aside and carried the plate to where she was working, adding, “I can’t imagine teething is fun with fangs.”

  Ildaria chuckled at the suggestion. “No. I don’t suppose it is.”

  He watched her finish with the onions and gather those up to throw in with the peppers and then commented, “Come to that, I doubt breastfeeding is fun with fangs either.” After a brief pause he added thoughtfully, “Or maybe not. Like mortal babies, immortal ones probably don’t have teeth when they’re born.”

  Ildaria seemed to consider his words seriously for a moment, and then confessed, “I don’t know. But the job of the nanos is to see to our well-being. That means getting blood. Immortal babies need blood too, so they might be born with fangs already in place.”

  G.G. grimaced at the thought of a cute little cuddly baby with fangs. Except . . . “Your fangs don’t show though. I mean, unless you’re using them. They just look like normal canines until they shift and drop or whatever it is they do.”

  “True.” She grabbed a spatula from the metal canister full of cooking utensils and used it to move the diced peppers and onions around in the pan. “So maybe they’re born with their fangs looking like canines as ours do.”

  “I’m guessing from your words that you’ve never seen an immortal baby either?” G.G. asked now, curious.

  “No,” Ildaria said quietly. “I lived in the poorer areas of the Dominican Republic. The immortals I knew couldn’t afford to buy enough blood to feed themselves properly, let alone a baby. And unlike mortals, they don’t expect the government or others to pay for them or their offspring. They simply do not have children.”

  “And lure tourists out to international waters to feed themselves,” he suggested dryly.

  Her gaze slid to meet his, unrepentant and a little cold. “Do not expect me to apologize for doing what I had to, to survive. A lion doesn’t feel guilty for eating a zebra, and I don’t feel guilty for what I’ve done. At least, my donors survived, and I made sure they always left with the memory that they had fun and were happy. Which is more than you can say for the poor zebra.”

  “Even the ones who attacked you?” he asked.

  Ildaria’s mouth firmed, anger flashing briefly across her face before she had it under control. “Even they left feeling happy and believing they had a good time.” Turning back to the pan, she muttered, “Though they didn’t deserve it.”

  G.G. immediately felt bad, but when he opened his mouth to apologize, she suggested, “You should put your toast in the oven on low so it doesn’t get cold. This will be another minute.”

  Sighing, he carried the plate to the oven, set it inside and turned the knob to warm. Feeling something rub against his leg then, he glanced down and spotted H.D. pawing at him.

  “Hey, buddy,” he murmured, scooping him up again. Rubbing the little beast affectionately between the ears, he carried him back to where Ildaria was working. She’d turned the heat down under the peppers and onions, and was now grating cheddar cheese.

  “I can do that for you,” G.G. offered.

  Ildaria hesitated, but then set the grater and cheese in the bowl, and pushed the whole thing toward him before reaching for another bowl and the eggs.

  Setting H.D. down again, G.G. began to grate cheese, but his mind was chasing itself in circles in search of something to say to get them back to the relaxed and happier state they’d been in before he’d said something stupid. In the end, sticking to business seemed the safest bet and he began to explain the accounting methods he used in England and what would have to be done to satisfy the Canadian government when it came to taxes. She listened, occasionally commenting, or asking a question as she continued to cook, and it seemed like no time at all had passed before she was sliding a beautiful, perfectly formed omelet stuffed with cheese, peppers, and onions onto a plate and topping it with a dollop of salsa.

  “Grab your toast, and sit down wherever you’re going to eat. I’ll fetch you a coffee,” Ildaria said as she pushed the plate toward him.

  G.G. didn’t argue. The aroma coming off the omelet was heavenly and he couldn’t wait to try it. Carrying the plate to the oven, he opened the door and started to reach in, but paused when a dish towel appeared in front of his face.

  “It will probably be hot,” Ildaria pointed out, placing the folded dish towel in his hand.

  “Thanks,” he mumbled, and used the cloth to grab the plate. Since he could feel the heat through the layered material, it seemed obvious the cloth had been a good idea. Shaking his head at his own thoughtlessness, he pushed the oven door closed with his elbow and then paused to stare at the knobs, debating how to turn the oven off with his hands full. Perhaps if he set the toast plate on—

  “I’ll get it. You go on and start eating before your breakfast gets cold,” Ildaria called from her position by the coffeepot.

  G.G. didn’t have to be told twice. He turned and carried his plates out to the bar, pausing with the swing door open long enough for H.D. to scoot through. He chose one of the booths rather than the bar. That way, H.D. could curl up on the seat next to him. He’d barely settled himself and the dog when he realized he didn’t have any silverware.

  Before he could scoot out, Ildaria came through the swing doors with two coffees, the cup handles caught through the fingers of one hand, and silverware clutched in the other. She also had a jar of marmalade and a jar of raspberry jam caught between her arm and one breast. The woman thought of everything. She was also showing her waitressing expertise.

  The omelet was amazing, and G.G. gobbled it up pretty quickly, grateful that she’d not only suggested it, but had made it for him. They then talked more about what the job entailed over their coffees, until Ildaria nodded and slid out from her side of the booth, taking his dirty plates and both their cups with her.

  “All right, then. I think I’ve got it. I’ll take H.D. into your office and get started, so you can prep for tonight’s opening.”

  G.G. wanted to protest that she didn’t have to go yet, that there was plenty of time. He was enjoying talking to her. But then his gaze slid to his watch and his eyes widened. They’d been talking for a lot longer than he’d realized. Three hours had passed since she’d walked in with H.D. The clientele would start arriving soon.

  “I gave H.D. the last container of food for breakfast,” Ildaria announced as G.G. picked up the jam and marmalade. “Where will I find the food for his lunch and dinner?”

  “It’s in the refrigerator in my apartment,” G.G. said, giving H.D. a nudge to get him to hop off the end of the seat so he could slide out of the booth. “I’ll run up and grab a couple now.”

  “Okay.” She smiled and then turned away saying lightly, “Come on H.D., we’re going to the kitchen.”

  The words were enough to make H.D. follow her. He even pranced happily at her side, his tail and ears flopping as he looked up at her and then ahead, before looking up at her eagerly again. The dog might not be able to talk, but he certainly understood a lot, and kitchen was one of those words he liked best since it usually meant food or a treat coming.
/>   G.G. shook his head with amusement at the dog’s behavior, and then his attention slid to Ildaria, landing briefly on her sexy high-heeled shoes before moving up to her legs. The woman had killer legs with delicate little ankles and strong, slender calves. She was also wearing stockings with seams down the back, which was just sexy as hell, he decided before following those seams up to her black skirt. Now he noticed there was a slit up the back, just enough to make walking in the pencil skirt possible. It reached halfway up the back of her legs, showing a hint of the top of her stockings so that he could tell she was wearing thigh highs and a garter belt of some sort . . . which was sexy as hell to him. Damn. Who knew accountants/dog sitters could be so hot?

  Down boy, he thought grimly. Lusting after Ildaria was wrong on so many levels. Not only was she an employee, which made her off-limits, but she was an immortal. Not for him.

  Suspecting he’d have to remind himself of that often, G.G. set the jam and marmalade he was carrying on the bar and took the hall to the back of the building. He’d go up and get H.D.’s food . . . and maybe take a very fast, very cold shower.

  Five

  “Who’s a pretty puppy? Hmmm?”

  G.G. paused in the doorway to his apartment at those words. Blinking, he glanced inside but all he could see was the end of the dining room table on the right at the far end of the room, and the back of his couch across from it on the left.

 

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