for bulk and tone. His features were foreign, almost Asian, uncanny eyes glinting, but with Western dimensions and sculpting. And in this light, his skin had the faint teak of some other nationality.
Again she was aggravated by a sense of displaced familiarity. He was beyond hotâhe was lust-ciousâso if sheâd seen this man before, she was sure sheâd remember him. Sheâd sure remember the curl of want in her belly and the finger tingles that urged her to stroke his ridiculously long hair. He wasnât even her type.
âYou donât believe me?â He raised a brow. The tilt of his head sent that black hair sliding over his shoulder, and she had to admit it suited him. Some women might like it. Some men, probably, too.
She shrugged. âIâm listening.â
He hesitated, as if choosing his words carefully. âI canât tell you much, as most of what occurred must remain secret, but I will say that the spread of the wraiths halted two years ago because Talia Kathleen Thorne killed their maker.â
Laylaâs mind briefly flashed blank in shock, then worked furiously to assimilate and judge his statement. The wraith spread did seem to halt about two years ago. But the rest? Talia had killed someone? Could it be true? Was that the reason Adam Thorne kept her hidden from the public?
âYou know Talia Thorne?â
âCertainly.â He smiled a bit. Drew out the moment as if to prick her interest.
âHow?â Her interest was pricked already.
âIâm her father.â
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Rose Petty dug her nails into a rotting wood post, slipped on the slimy wet mud, and buried splinters in her hands and bare feet as she climbed from the river. She crawled onto a ratty dock on her elbows, her hands too bloody to hold her weight, and collapsed into a fetal position. Her naked body quivered in the chilly air and her teeth chattered kat-a-kat-a-kat-a-kat.
Stupid, stupid. She never should have made for the river. The burn of her reformation had been excruciating, but no water could possibly douse it. Sheâd only drown herself and die forever . Thatâs what you risked when you came back. Soul dead. Even Hell was better, not that sheâd ever belonged there. If sheâd screamed it once, sheâd screamed it a thousand times: Thereâd been a mistake. She had to do those things. It was self-defense. She didnât belong in Hell.
Never mind. She was out now. No rivers. Lesson learned.
Her new body shook with the coldâ kat-a-kat-a-kat-a-kat. Her muscles cramped in contraction. Gooseflesh swept viciously across her skin.
Warm. She had to get warm.
Trembling, she pulled her feet beneath her, pushed herself up a bit by her wrists, and careened to standing.
Docks. An empty gray expanse lay before her, dotted with orange and blue cargo containers piled up among rotting pallets, decaying in the cold, wet air.
She needed clothes. Shelter. Food.
She wiped her running nose on the back of her damp arm and stumbled forward. Across the lot she could make out a door. An office.
Okay, knock on that door, get help. Get warm, she told herself.
Sheeeiiiiit, nice little piece of ass.
Rose turned, belly clutching, and put an arm across her breasts and a shaking hand splayed at her crotch as she looked for the voice. Saw no one.
Pretty titties, too. Gots to get me some oâthat.
What theâ? She stopped herself before she swore; a lady didnât swear, no matter how pressed. But this was too strange: The voice was in her head, though not hers. Like maybe her mind got wired wrong when her body reformed itself. Or maybe she just came back different.
Her gaze flicked from glinting window to dull doorway, but she found the source sitting in a car, lighting up a cigarette. A paunchy old man, skin going yellow. Tsk. Tsk. Probably too much drink. Had to be him, what with the way his beady eyes stared at her. Maybe this mind-reading trick was okay.