‘From what you’ve told me today,’ Dee said, ‘breathing makes you hot.’
‘If you’re the one breathing.’
Dee flushed, unaccustomed to the flirting. Terrified to anticipate anything beyond his escort through motel halls.
There was no Xan here. Not that she should have been surprised. It was one of those brown-and-gold-paisley kinds of places with a pool smack in the middle so the chlorine clogged up your nose. But even chlorine couldn’t mask cinnamon and sulfur. At least not Xan’s mix. And there wasn’t a trace of it.
Dee had only caught her scent once, at the Peaceful Garden B and B down the road in Martinsville. The owner swore the only guest she’d had was a shy librarian sort who’d checked out that morning. Dee had nodded and moved on to the next place. She wasn’t going to give up until she’d checked out every hotel, motel, and rented room in a ten-mile radius.
Danny held open the General Lee’s front door. ‘Why don’t you just meet with her?’
‘I did.’
Danny frowned at her. ‘Then why are we chasing her around town?’ Dee struck the General Lee off the list she’d scrawled on the back of deposit slips and stepped out onto the cracked parking lot. ‘Because I can’t let her get another jump on me. Next time, she could really hurt us.’
‘She hurt you?’
‘Not enough to matter. Not like my parents. I was right. She killed them. So I’m not going to let her kill my sisters.’
‘She told you that?’
‘She did, actually. I shouldn’t have been surprised, I guess. She said it was their fault, of course.’
‘Can you tell me anything else?’
Dee considered him a moment, with his clear honest eyes and his untested power. ‘Not yet. I’m sorry’ Danny nodded. ‘Okay’ He steered her to the bike. Dee stopped. ‘That’s it? Okay?’
He shot her a bright smile that could make a girl forget her name. ‘Sure. Witch hunts make me hot.’
He bent far enough that his lips fluttered over the shell of her ear. ‘Especially when the hunter is a gorgeous redhead with a butterfly tattoo on her shoulder’
Dee damn near melted into a puddle on the spot. God, she wished he’d stop doing that. He was driving her insane. Already she felt as if she needed to borrow one of Mare’s bras. Hers suddenly seemed so tight. He handed her in and out of doors, on and off the bike, and always managed to find a bit of exposed skin to brush against. Wrist, throat, the gap between her jeans and T-shirt above her hip. She felt as if he’d stroked a live wire over her. And he kept riding her back and forth across those godforsaken cobblestones. How did he know?
‘I’d say I should dye my hair,’ she challenged, ‘but you’d tell me that brunettes make you hot.’
‘Do they have tattoos?’
She giggled. She couldn’t help it. He was keeping her in an agony of ambivalence. He tempted her so much, with his mad blue eyes and sly smiles. But he terrified her even more. She’d seen the horror in men’s eyes. She couldn’t bear to see it in his. For all the brave talk in her studio, all she wanted was to put off the inevitable as long as possible.
They stopped by a Dollar Dayz and got Dee a small spiral notebook to replace her deposit slips, a package of rubber bands for her hair, which Danny immediately snatched, and ten more Nutter Butter bars. Witch-hunter supplies. They also discovered that Xan had been in. Of course everybody in the place remembered the stunning visitor from the day before. Staying over to Bicksburg, they thought. Two of the men even pulled out phone numbers. Dee would have told them how hopeless a return call was, but Fred Norton had tried to bully Mare in high school. Mare had knocked two of his teeth out, of course. Dee figured Xan would make him grovel like a serf. She tucked her new notebook in her purse and headed for the door.
‘Can we have sex now?’ Danny asked, following. Dee patted him like a toddler. ‘After Bicksburg.’
‘You promise?’
‘Don’t you ever think of anything else?’ she demanded as they walked across the parking lot.
He never slowed. ‘No man ever thinks of anything else. Well, except rare moments when they’re trying to remember football statistics.’
She was smiling again. Damn him. He made her want him.
‘You don’t have to kill yourself, Dee,’ he said, touching her arm again. Always touching her. ‘You know she’ll find you.’
‘The best defense is a good offense.’
He grinned. ‘Football coaches-’
Dee laughed, pushed him again. ‘We can’t have sex.’
She should just get it over with. She should haul him into one of those cheesy pressboard-furniture-and-industrial-carpet rooms they’d been scouring, toss him on the bed, and break most of the cardinal rules of nature. He sure wouldn’t be whispering in her ear after that.
‘You’re not going to have sex with me until you find her, are you?’ he asked.
Dee stood by his bike, running her hand over the butter-soft leather. ‘I have responsibilities. Since you showed up, I’ve forgotten most of them. But that’s not going to keep Xan from coming after us. If we don’t stop her first, we’ll never be safe.’
‘Coward.’
She straightened to find that he wasn’t smiling anymore. The storm shadows collected in the hollows of his cheeks and made him look fierce.
‘I am not a coward.’
‘You’re hiding behind your sisters, behind the threat of your aunt. Behind the door of that little house of yours. You’re braver than that, Dee.’
‘I’m not hiding. I’m trying to live a normal life, just as I dreamed when I was a little girl. Hell, I even have a white picket fence.’
She knew she was trembling again. Her stomach was suddenly in turmoil. Right there in the middle of the Dollar Dayz parking lot, for God’s sake. Couldn’t he challenge her in private? Couldn’t he not challenge her at all?
‘You have a prison surrounded by a big garden.’
‘You don’t understand,’ she whispered, her voice suddenly hoarse. ‘You don’t know what Xan really is.’
‘I’m not talking about Xan.’
‘Then what?’
He bent over so he could face her eye to eye and took her face in his hands. ‘Not everyone hides her passion in the attic, Dee. Come out into the sunlight.’
‘As what?’ she asked, pulling away. ‘I can be a bulldog. Or maybe a seagull, except nobody really wants them around, no matter how cute they are.’
He ran a finger down her cheek, setting off sparks all the way down her arm.
‘As the woman who painted those paintings.’
He brought her to a stop. They’ll see me.
Danny frowned. ‘Who’ll see you?’ Dee started. ‘You’re doing it again.’
‘Then maybe I am psychic. Tell me, Dee. Who’ll see you?’
She drew in a deep breath, struggling to quell the hot rush of tears that crowded the back of her throat. She couldn’t bear to look at him. She watched the street.
The Dollar Dayz took up a corner of Main near the highway, a graceless stretch of fast food and strip malls. She’d painted it in shades of umber and gray. ‘Do you know what a nightmare it was to be Delightful Dee-Dee? To never have privacy? To have strangers think they had the right to you? Those paintings are…’ She picked at a loose button on her cardigan. ‘They’re me.’ She knew her voice was small. ‘I should have the right to say who I share them with.’
Gently Danny lifted her face. ‘You showed them to me.’
The button came off in her hand. ‘You don’t understand them, either’
‘I understand that they’re the product of an amazing, beautiful, talented woman who should be able to share her vision with the world. I understand that I want her to smile more and worry less. That I’ve been thinking about wandering the world with her just so I can watch her paint my favorite places, because I can’t even imagine how they’ll look through her eyes.’
How could something that sweet hurt so much?
Danny took her by the arms. ‘The rest doesn’t matter, Dee. I promise.’
Damn. The tears were swelling, searing her throat and forcing her to swallow. She nodded. ‘I promise you. It does.’
‘Then make love with me. As the woman who paints those paintings.’
For a minute Dee couldn’t manage a single syllable. She could barely see him through the tears she kept sniffing back. ‘You don’t believe in her. And I don’t think you’d like her’
‘I have the courage to try. And I don’t think I’m going to be disappointed. Do you?’
There was no air to breathe. Her heart hammered like an off-balance washing machine. Dee opened her mouth twice before she could answer. ‘Will you promise me something?’
‘My life, my wealth, my body.’
‘If you suddenly see somebody you recognize, just close your eyes?’
His laugh was sharp. ‘You do make life interesting, Dee.’
‘Promise.’
‘I promise. But I’m not inviting anybody to this party but you.’
His eyes were so sweet. So very dear and bright and clear. Dee sighed. ‘You may be surprised by who shows up.’
‘And you’ll make love to me without consideration of whether Xan is confronted or not. Or whether your sisters are having man troubles or Xan troubles or tattoo troubles. I assume they got them, too.’
Dee gaped. ‘How did you know?’
He grinned. ‘Because I know you’d never do that on your own. But you’d do anything for your sisters. Now, are you agreed?’
‘Where? When?’
‘Dee,’ he said with a chuckle. ‘We’re not scheduling a root canal. These things are better done spontaneously.’
‘Not in my house they aren’t. Lately, you just don’t know what’s going to happen there. Besides, I really, really don’t want any surprises. Well, more than are inevitable.’
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