So was that where Hanna was heading? She was certainly moving in the right direction for the clubs, but the rail and bus station wasn't far away-though she didn't exactly look the type to take public transport. Certainly an expensive fur coat, whether it was faux or not, wasn't what any sane person would wear if trying to avoid either trouble or getting wet. Although if she was the one hacking away at the vampires, maybe saneness wasn't in her vocabulary.
We crossed Little Bourke Street and hurried on toward Bourke. The quick-click of the blonde's heels were now mingling with the base-heavy thump of music from the clubs farther down the road. She still hadn't looked around, which was odd if she was up to no good. You'd think she'd show a little more awareness of her surroundings…
The thought faded as awareness suddenly prickled across my skin. The woman wasn't the only one being followed.
I resisted the urge to look around and flared my nostrils, drawing in the scents of the wet night and rifling through them quickly. And there it was in the undernotes-a scent I recognized. A wolf who obviously
'I know you're there, Kye,' I said softly. He wasn't close, but I'd knew he'd hear me anyway.
There was no response, no sound of quickened footsteps, but that wash of awareness grew stronger until he fell into step beside me.
It felt like I was walking beside a furnace, and a whole lot of me wanted to snuggle right up to it. And
Which might not be the case, but hey, a girl has to dream a little.
God, what was it with this wolf? I couldn't exactly blame the moon heat anymore, because the full moon was over for the next month. So why did Kye-someone I didn't
Maybe Liander was right. Maybe my wolf soul had had enough, and was putting her foot down to demand equal loving rights.
He was right, he didn't, but there was no way on this green Earth I was going to admit it.
He glanced at me then, his amber eyes cool and judging, weighing his options, sizing up the opposition. The tension that rolled through me was part fear, part a readiness to attack.
And if he got proof, he'd kill her. I resisted the urge to rub the chill from my arms, although I was no longer sure if the cause was the cold or the man. This wolf might have me in a spin, but he repelled my saner half.
Because in him I saw a reflection of myself-a reflection of the killer Jack wanted me to be.
He was everything I was trying
And for that reason alone, I'd fight this damn attraction as hard as I could. I didn't need a constant reminder of the future that might be mine.
He met my gaze again, and a slight smile teased one corner of his mouth. It didn't reach his eyes. Didn't warm the cold depths.
I said it in a hopeful kind of way, and his smile widened. Despite the continuing chill in his gaze, the night suddenly didn't seem as cold anymore.
My wolf soul, it seemed, wasn't going to give up this attraction very easily.
Oh, he was wanted all right. It was just lucky the moon heat was over and I had some measure of control over myself. Not that control did much good given he could probably smell my interest. It was hard for a wolf to hide that sort of thing.
Though
He smiled again and didn't say anything. We walked another block and crossed over Bourke Street. Laughter and voices joined the bass-heavy beat, and the scent of alcohol and humanity rode the wet night air.
'I liked your performance in the club tonight,' he said after a while. I guess he figured us actually having some conversation did look a little better than utter silence should our target happen to look over her shoulder. 'Even for a werewolf, you moved extraordinarily well.'
I raised an eyebrow. 'You were there?'
I was.
'Disguised, obviously.'
'Obviously. You didn't spot me.'
'Hard to spot someone if they've erased their scent and donned a completely different look.'
'True.' He glanced at me. 'It took me a moment to recognize you. Your look and smell was different enough that I glanced past you several times before I realized who you were. I like your regular look better, by the way.'
'Then I'd better keep this one,' I said dryly. 'You planning to be there tomorrow night?'
'Of course.' Telepathically, he added,
And if he did, I
'I wouldn't.'
I raised an eyebrow again. 'Why not? We both know you'd enjoy it.'
'That is the problem.'
Of course he wasn't. He was here to track down and kill. Just like me. A shiver rolled across my skin and I rubbed my arms. If he noted the movement, he didn't do the gentlemanly thing, like offer me his coat. Quinn would have.
As we neared Flinders Lane, Hanna suddenly swung in our direction, looking left and right before running across. She didn't even look our way as she ran past us, moving up the street with a quick glance at her