Part 9 (1/2)
Gadara stepped closer to Eve. He pressed his wrist to her forehead and his gaze narrowed. She looked back at him with a challenging tilt to her chin. She felt as if she was burning up and knew he had to feel it, too.
”Well done,” he said. Nothing more.
”Excuse me?” Molenaar protested. ”She almost killed me!”
”You should not have been tardy this morning, Mr. Molenaar,” Gadara dismissed. ”Then this misunderstanding would not have happened.”
Laurel spun on her heel and stomped away. ”This is ridiculous,” she tossed over her shoulder, ”and I'm tired. Good night.”
”I will walk with you, bella, ” Romeo offered, jogging after her. Richens snorted in disgust. ”That's devotion if he can still s.h.a.g her with that s.h.i.+t on her face.”
”Mr. Richens.” Gadara's voice was disapproving, as was his frown. ”You will keep such vulgar thoughts to yourself. Please show Mr. Molenaar into the house and help him settle in.”
”I'm hungry,” Molenaar said, shrugging off his rucksack.
”You're always hungry,” Ken scoffed.
Claire yawned. ”I am returning to my bed.” Her gaze settled on Eve. ”Please do not wake me when you come in.”
Eve's return smile was forced.
A cell phone with a Handel's Messiah ringtone rang inside the men's quarters. Her brows rose. Gadara smiled. ”That would be mine, of course.”
”Of course.” Archangels with cell phones, such was her life. Ready to crawl under a rock, Eve offered a brief wave, then moved around him. ”I'm calling it a night.”
”You should wait a moment, Ms. Hollis,” he suggested. ”Cain will insist on speaking with you.”
”How do you know-” Eve stopped. Of course he would know, he was an archangel.
”Because I ceased communicating with him when we heard the disturbance out here.” His dark eyes were bright with amus.e.m.e.nt. ”And I told him to call.”
”Oh. Right.” As if Alec took orders well.
”Come in where it is warm.”
”I'm not cold. I told you that.” And the fact that he wouldn't acknowledge her condition made it even more suspect.
Still, Eve followed Gadara to the men's side of the duplex. Edwards was pouring himself a gla.s.s of milk in the kitchen. Richens was leaning against the counter and speaking in rapid, heavily accented British English that was unintelligible to her. He acknowledged her with a jerk of his chin, then looked back at Edwards, who was examining her with an a.s.sessing glance.
She fought the urge to flip them the bird.
”Everything is as it should be,” Gadara said into the phone. ”Yes, there was a disturbance . . . Fine. In fact, she is extraordinary. I am quite impressed . . . Yes, I told her you would. Just a moment.”
The archangel held the phone out to her. Accepting it, Eve moved to the far corner of the living room where a ma.s.sive spider web occupied much of the s.p.a.ce.
”Hi,” she said in a subdued tone that made her feel better but wouldn't prevent mark-enhanced eavesdropping.
”Hey.” The sound of Alec's gruff, purring voice filled her with relief. ”You're not answering your phone.”
”I had to turn it off so it didn't disturb my roommate.”
He growled. ”Put it on vibrate and keep it on you.”
”I tried that, but then I left the d.a.m.n thing under my pillow when I couldn't sleep.”
”What's going on, angel? Are you hurt?”
”I'm fine.”
”Raguel cut me off, and you weren't answering. Scared the s.h.i.+t out of me.”
”It was a stupid misunderstanding.”
”Couldn't have been that stupid. You impressed Raguel.”
”What can I say?” She shrugged. ”He's easily amused.”
”Does he have you training already? It's after two in the morning.”
”I told you, I couldn't sleep.”
”You miss me.” There was a smile in his voice.
”That, and it's too hot to nod off.”
”Hot? In Monterey at night?”
Eve rubbed at the s.p.a.ce between her brows. ”I think I'm coming down with something. I'm pretty sure I have a fever.”
There was a long pause. ”You can't get sick.”
”You have to believe me, I'm not giving you a choice. Gadara won't listen to me and-”
”I'm going to take a shower.”
She stiffened at the sound of a woman's voice in the background on the other end of the phone. It was throaty and seductive, as if the speaker had just woken up . . . or just had a screaming o.r.g.a.s.m. ”Who is that?”
Alec groaned. ”A mess.”
”Sounds like a woman.”
”She's a Mare.”
Eve's foot tapped against the hardwood, her earlier feelings rus.h.i.+ng to the fore. ”She doesn't sound like a horse to me. I bet she doesn't look like one either. Where are you?”
He laughed, the low rumble as enticing when she was mad as when she was completely besotted. ”She's a Mare, as in night mare. And I'm in my room. It's the middle of the night, where else would I be?”
”You have a naked woman in your room in the middle of the night.”
Edwards gave a low whistle. Eve turned around and flipped him the bird.