Part 13 (1/2)
By the time they reached the door to his room, he was throbbing with need far beyond the engorging rush of blood to a place that required little encouragement. With a word from him, Maris stretched one arm behind and turned the k.n.o.b, giving the door a shove with her fist. He stumbled inside and kicked the door shut. Maris wriggled out of his arms.
Striped by the cool glow of the streetlamp through the blinds, she took off her clothes. No preamble, no coyness. Her skin glowed, pale and blue-white as if it had never seen the sun. Prevalent pelvic bones cast a deep shadow that nearly masked the curling, dark triangle of hair. He ran his fingers across her abdomen and down between her legs. He stroked her sodden folds, curled his finger in lazy circles around the nub of swollen flesh until she moaned.
”Take off your clothes, Dan. Now.”
He stripped, staring a moment at the shape their clothes made on the floor. She touched his jaw, turned his face away.
”Look at me. Just me.” With a sweep of her leg, she kicked their discarded garments across the rug.
”But-”
”Only me.”
She urged him across the floor with his face in her hands, her eyes steady and luminous, the hard-on he'd almost forgotten for a second still powerful and throbbing. When they reached the bed she climbed backward onto it, first one foot, then the other, until she stood balanced as if on the prow of a s.h.i.+p. The mattress dipped beneath the weight of his knee. He stroked her again, with the ball of his thumb this time, slow circular motions before he darted in with his tongue to taste her. Last night had been brimstone. Tonight was the sweet, slow drip of honey.
She came without noise, which surprised him. He felt it, though, in the warm contraction around his fingers. ”I'm sorry,” she whispered, a sound like velvet on sand. ”I don't know if I could have stopped it.”
”I wouldn't want you to. We still have time to make that happen again.”
Maris dropped to her b.u.t.tocks on the rumpled bedclothes, scooting toward the head of the bed. She clasped the metal frame with both hands, knees drawn up and spread for him in invitation. He didn't hesitate. The noise she made in her throat was the kind of thrum that visited the edge of hearing, sounding deep in the bone and rising until she cried out loud. Unable to hold back any longer, he pulled her down beneath him and drove hard inside until the sound of his pending release joined hers. She silenced him with her mouth on his, pulling him down into that small death no man could live without.
Maris rose up onto her elbow, peering down into Dan's face. Yes, asleep this time. She'd thought he'd been sleeping last night as well, but she'd been wrong. His stumble earlier, a bad attempt to deflect her question, had told her that. Tonight he slept well, his mouth open and the smallest sound of untroubled respiration coming from it. When he awoke, would he remember what he'd said to her on the stairs? She hoped not. They'd been intimate words she wasn't ready to hear from him and he sure as h.e.l.l wasn't ready to say.
She climbed carefully from the bed and searched the floor for his s.h.i.+rt. She would wear that since it would cover more of her bare a.s.s than her own would. After slipping the garment over her head, Maris held the fabric to her face for a brief inhalation of Dan's scent prior to pulling it down over her body. Before heading to the bathroom, she stared at the pile of clothing.
Dan had noticed something there earlier. Although she didn't believe he recognized what had drawn his attention, she had witnessed the change in his face before she kicked their clothing away. An ill-omened trick of light and shadow, as serpentine sleeves and humped denim created the spectral inference of a lighthouse lying along the rug. Not alarming in itself. People saw shapes in clouds all the time-made a game of naming them-and in photographs as well, claiming to have captured the spirit world on film. But this particular form harked back to the dream of Great-Aunt Alva that had returned Maris to Alcina Cove. Dan and death were connected as one in the vision of that lighthouse, a landmark structure only a short distance up the coastline that sent its beam across the ocean tides nightly. She could try to keep Dan away from the sea, but it was far more likely the correlation was abstract rather than direct. In fact, it wasn't until she'd met Dan, witnessed the darkness d.o.g.g.i.ng him like a second skin, that she had recalled that part of her dream. a.s.sumptions could be dangerous, blinding one to the heart of the matter.
Maris tucked Dan's s.h.i.+rt along her thighs and climbed up to sit cross-legged on the cleared end of his desk. She pulled down on one of the slats in order to peer out to the street below. Behind her, the bedsprings creaked, followed by the soft tread of bare feet across the carpet.
Dan's arm slipped around her from behind, forearm resting against her collarbones, fingers wrapped around her upper arm. ”What's up?”
Maris grabbed the pull cord for the blinds and raised them about eighteen inches from the sill. Over her head, Dan's breath rasped into his lungs.
”I've seen that twice now. The night Alva Mabry died, and last night as well. Is it...is it her, do you think?”
”My, how far you have come in two days' time, Dan Stauffer.” Maris leaned forward, fingers splayed across the gla.s.s. Dan followed her movements, his chest warm against her back.
”Is it?”
”It could be, Dan. It upsets me to admit it, but Aunt Alva could be that determined.”
”You mean you don't know for sure?”
Maris shook her head. ”Many spirits take the form of the crone, but my gut feeling is that it is Alva. Yet she's not speaking to me. I'm looking right at her, and there's not a single word.” As she spoke, the translucent silhouette vanished with an upward curl like smoke. Maris lowered the blinds to their former position. ”What time is it?”
”Two? Two-thirty?”
She skated her fingers between his, fitting them together. Lifting his hand, she pressed her lips against his knuckles and slid her tongue into the place where his fingers met hers. ”One more time into the fray?”
He didn't say no.
Chapter 14.
When Maris awoke in the morning, she discovered Dan energized, dressed, and tying a pair of running shoes on his feet, declaring his intention of taking the first run he had in weeks. She waved him on his way with a flutter of her fingers before rolling over to bury her head beneath the pillow. ”You have fun with that.”
As soon as she heard the front door shut, she sat up. What was she doing here? They were suddenly like a couple, the little woman staying in bed to rest up after a hard night while the man took off on his jock pursuits, showered and shaved and revitalized. Maris swung her legs over the edge of the bed. She needed her own shower. Desperately. And a plan. Some kind of plan. She couldn't have Dan risking his livelihood, his safety to save her. Because he would. He would do all of that without understanding why. He certainly wasn't in love with her, but a link existed between them that couldn't be explained away. s.e.x, sure, that had been a blast. Fulfilling and hot enough to burn away some of the blackness adhering to them both. If she stayed by his side, though, the doom she sensed waiting would claim him, and somehow her hand would be in that dark destiny.
”Aunt Alva, I need you. I need you to explain this to me.”
The distance between them had been too great for too long, and now...well, if Alva Mabry chose not to speak to her, nothing on this earth could change that.
Maris showered, using Dan's shampoo and Dan's soap, realizing she would smell like him for the rest of the day. His scent would be in her hair, on her skin. As unsettling as that was, the recognition would comfort her. She considered dumping a bit of his shampoo into a plastic bag, enough to open and breathe in as necessary in a kind of stalker-ish aromatherapy.
She had nearly finished dressing and was putting her earrings back in when she heard the front door open. Walking barefoot down the stairs, she called Dan's name. A male voice answered her that wasn't his.
”h.e.l.lo? Who's that?”
Maris stopped, fingers tight around the handrail. If the person was someone Dan worked with, she couldn't let him know her ident.i.ty. Things would only go from bad to worse. As she was deciding what to do, a man walked from the living room back into the foyer. She recognized him. He'd been the other detective following them down the hall toward the room where Dan had fingerprinted her. Dan had practically shut the door in his face.
”Ah, s.h.i.+t,” the man said upon sight of her. ”That guy has f.u.c.ked himself good this time. Where is he?”
Maris sat on the step, tucking her hands into the folds of her skirt. ”He...he went for a run.”
”A run? Feeling proud of himself, is he?”
Maris frowned at the man. ”Jamie, isn't it?”
”Yeah.”
”Don't be like that. He's a good man. And a good cop, I'm sure.”
Jamie sat down on the step below her, leaning his back against the wall. ”You don't even know the guy.”
”Maybe not. At least not the way you know him. Obviously, you're shocked because his behavior is uncharacteristic. That should tell you something.”
”Then he better start acting like the guy I know. I mean, how long have you been in town? Two days? A perfect stranger, and possibly the only one who might have had reason to off old lady Mabry-sorry. But you know what I'm saying is true. He's walking a dangerous path. What did you do to him? I can't see him taking a risk like this if he was thinking with his brains and not another part of his anatomy.”
Maris crushed fabric between her fingers and slowly let it go. ”I did nothing to him. And I didn't kill my aunt. You're a rude man, considering you don't know me either.”
Jamie puffed a breath out through his nose. He reached up and scratched his scalp through short, auburn hair. ”I'm sorry. It's just-I'm worried, you know?”
As am I, she wanted to say. For so many reasons.
He dropped both forearms onto his thighs, clasping his hands together between his knees. ”How long has he been gone?”