Harmony's Way (17 page)

Read Harmony's Way Online

Authors: Lora Leigh

BOOK: Harmony's Way
7.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Are they going to lock him up?” She moved ahead of him as they left the bedroom and headed for the front door.

“They’ll lock him up. He’ll be lucky if he sees the outside of a cell in the next twenty years. Shooting at the State Police is a heavy crime.”

Lance had seen the officer carefully lifting a pistol from the bedroom floor and putting it in an evidence bag as his partner read Mason his rights.

“They’ll lock him up for shooting at a police officer but not for beating the hell out of his wife?” Harmony shook her head as they moved outside. “The world is a sick, sick place, Lance.”

“We do our best, Harmony.”

“And when your personal best isn’t good enough?” she asked as they reached the Raider.

As she turned to him, Lance saw the shadows that filled her amazing green eyes. They were pure, brilliant, with no specks of darker color. Almost mesmerizing.

“When my personal best hasn’t been good enough, I keep fighting,” he sighed as he leaned against the door, trapping her between him and the interior of the vehicle. “I come out here every time the neighbors call. I try to help Liza as best I can. Until she lets go of her fear enough to help me put him behind bars, then there’s nothing I can do.”

“And the little boy?”

“I do my best, Harmony.” He knew the question she was asking, the warning behind it. “I uphold the law, baby. I don’t make it.”

She inhaled slowly. “I’m not cut out for this job. Maybe Lenny will trade places with me.”

They both knew that wasn’t possible. The papers she had signed had been clearly written. Harmony had to work patrol, not a desk.

“You have to take satisfaction from the good you can accomplish,” he whispered, reaching out to touch her pale cheek. “When you see the arrest turn into a conviction, when you know you’ve done your job well enough to stop the leaks in the system. The good outweighs the bad, Harmony.”

“If he gets free again, he’ll kill them both,” she told him. “He told that boy to scream if anyone came in. And he almost screamed. He’ll make that child pay. And when he does, I’ll go hunting.”

And there was Death. He heard the transformation in her voice, watched as she stared back at him ruthlessly.

“Will you let Jonas win that easily?” he asked. “How many other children could you help by living, Harmony?”

“What will it matter if I’ve failed one of the few who gave me his trust?” she asked him then. “Don’t let that bastard escape your law, Lance, or he may well find Death’s justice.”

Then she reached up, laying both hands against his chest as a breath shuddered from her. And he felt it then. The heat in his body building, reaching out to her as the winds whispered of pain at his ear.

Reaching up, he covered the backs of her hands with his own, standing silently as she let her head lean forward to rest against his chest as well. Other eyes watched them, and Lance knew it. As the ambulance pulled from the drive, the other officers moved slowly to their vehicles, glancing back at them curiously. And Mason. Lance could feel his gaze boring into his back, stripping through him as hatred pressed against him.

Tommy Mason was going to be a problem. Lance could feel it.

“Sorry.” Harmony straightened with an abrupt movement, pulling her hands from his chest and straightening her shoulders as she stared up at him defiantly.

His hands still held hers. Turning them over, he looked down at her reddened skin and knew that the mating heat was taking its toll.

She had touched another man. The hormonal forces inside her didn’t differentiate between touches. It was showing her, warning her, that no other male’s touch would do.

“I didn’t think about this,” he whispered as he lifted her hands to his lips and placed a kiss in the center.

She inhaled roughly as Lance felt arousal tearing through him. Dammit, wrong place. Definitely the wrong place for this.

“Let’s get those reports written so we can head home.” He released her slowly. “We can check in on Liza and Jaime at the hospital if you want to, when we’re finished.”

She shook her head firmly as she ducked away from him and slid into the Raider.

“It’s better if we don’t,” she finally whispered. “Better for all of us.”

As they drove to the department, Lance kept his window down a bare inch, allowing the winds to move through the vehicle, to whisper at his ear. Warnings. Danger. Pain. And Tommy Mason’s name.

He pulled into the parking lot of the Sheriff’s Department and sighed wearily before leaving the vehicle, staying close to Harmony as they moved up the steps toward the entrance.

Inside, a crowd milled within the reception area, which wasn’t that unusual on a Friday night. The State Police cruisers were parked at the curb, which meant Steven and his partner, Lyle, were booking Mason.

Following Harmony, he stepped into mayhem. With no warning, no whisper of the wind to guide him, he came face-to-face with Reverend H. R. Alonzo.

“Sheriff Jacobs, your actions tonight border on the criminal.” Alonzo stood with perhaps half a dozen of his society members backing him as deputies looked on warily.

Harmony tried to move to the side, to skirt the crowd and escape the coming confrontation. Until one of the larger men stepped in front of her, his hand reaching out to grip her arm.

Harmony hissed. A furious feline sound of anger as she bared her teeth and jerked back from him.

“Alonzo, what the hell are you doing here?” Lance grabbed Harmony’s arm before it could go for her knife, and pushed her behind him.

“You can’t save her.” Righteous indignation flushed the reverend’s heavy jowls as his pale blue eyes burned with fanaticism. “We saw what she did to that poor man the State Police just brought in. The brutality of her attack was uncalled for.”

Lance stared back at him coldly. Brutality, his ass.

“If you have a complaint to file, come back in the morning,” he snapped. “Until then, get the hell out of my way.”

“Do you think you can force these animals on Godfearing people.” Alonzo’s voice rose, the strident question posed in a sermonizing tone that grated on Lance’s nerves.

Behind him, he could feel Harmony watching, waiting. The air began to hum with danger then.

“Alonzo, it’s too damned late for this,” Lance growled as he gripped Harmony’s arm and began to move around the crowd. They shifted with him as their voices began to rise in volume.

“Since when do we cater to animals, Sheriff?”
one
woman’s voice rang out. “It’s bad enough we have that cousin of yours consorting with those creatures and messing up our town.”

He swung his gaze to one of the matrons of the city, a prudish, troublemaking old busybody who protested everything under the sun. He should have known she would be here.

“Take it up with the City Council, Matilda,” he snapped. “Not here.”

“He’s as ensnared by the creature as his cousin is to her own pet,” Alonzo cried out. “Abominations are what they are. It’s time to cast them out of this God-fearing town…”

“David, clear this place out!” Lance snarled at the deputies watching in indecision, as he began to push his way through the crowd, tugging Harmony along with him.

A second later she was torn from him. Turning, Lance watched in fury as a heavyset male attempted to twist her arm, to force her to cower. Deputies were rushing to the confrontation, but before they could push through the crowd, Harmony turned, twisted and within a breath had the much larger man on his back, her gun lodged beneath his chin.

Lance was thanking God it wasn’t the knife.

“You have just assaulted an officer of the law.” Her smile was smug, despite the edge of pain in her gaze. “It is with great personal pleasure that I inform you that you are under arrest.”

“Get these people out of here,” Lance yelled to a deputy as he turned to Alonzo’s triumphant expression.

“Your society member just assaulted one of my deputies,” he informed him furiously. “As the leader of this little get-together, maybe I should arrest you while I’m at it.”

Lance could feel the rage building inside him as he forced himself not to plant his fist in the reverend’s gloating, overblown face.

“My lawyer will be here in the morning,” Alonzo assured him as the rest of the crowd began to move toward the door. “Don’t worry, Sheriff, I’ll make certain I do God’s work, with or without your help.”

“God’s work?” Harmony was breathing roughly as she came to her feet, turning her attacker over to the deputies as she rushed for the reverend. “Let me show you—”

“Harmony,” Lance snapped, turning on her quickly. “You have reports.”

She stopped in her tracks, the tone of his voice causing her to hesitate, before her eyes narrowed and her gaze focused over his shoulder.

“Now,” he reminded her firmly.

He could see the tension shuddering through her body and knew the pain was beginning to build inside her. Two men in one night that she had been forced to protect herself or others against.

Her lips thinned before the upper curve curled menacingly.

“Reports,” she said slowly, her eyes never leaving Alonzo. “Of course, Sheriff. Just let me get on that. I can play later.” The muttered threat wasn’t lost on him or Alonzo.

“Only animals react in such a way…”

Before Lance could stop himself his fist was bunched in the material of the stiff shirt the reverend wore as he lifted the other man to his tiptoes.

“Get the hell out of my department,” he snarled. “And while you’re talking to your lawyers, tell them to expect a call from the county prosecutor as well.”

Lance pushed him toward the door, hating the fury rising inside him. He had fought for calm all his life, fought to find that balance inside himself that Harmony had yet to learn. But there were people, such as Reverend Alonzo, who could disrupt it every time.

Alonzo jerked back and straightened his shirt with a huff as his bulbous nose twitched in anger.

“You haven’t seen the last of me, Sheriff. It’s my duty to make certain these creatures don’t infect us all. And I will see my duty through. No matter the obstacles. I have sworn my duty to God—”

“And I’m sure he thinks about as much of it as I do,” Lance growled. “Now, get the hell out of here.”

Turning, he waved Lenny toward the reverend.

“Make sure he finds the door. Fast,” he ordered the deputy as he stalked to his office. “And make certain he doesn’t return.”

Lance slammed the door behind him before stalking across the room to where Harmony was rubbing her hands together, her expression frantic.

“My hands are freezing.” She stared up at him in distress. “Or burning. I can’t make it stop.”

Harmony didn’t know whether to laugh or to cry. What had been merely uncomfortable, irritating, before was now becoming strident. The cold burn in her hands and along the front of her body felt blistering. Especially between her thighs, where she had been forced to straddle the two men.

As Lance gripped her hands, she expected another of those tender kisses in the centers of her palms. It had helped before. Instead, he pushed her hands beneath the loose tail of his shirt as he gripped her head with his free hand.

And he kissed her.

He devoured her.

His lips plundered her own with deep, drugging kisses as his tongue slipped and slid against hers. Harmony moaned in overwhelming relief and hunger as the heavy, swollen sensation of the glands beneath her tongue began to ease. The sweet taste of it fired her senses further, sensitized her flesh, but nothing could have made her need Lance more than she already did.

Adrenaline pumped through her body; her greatest weakness was that surging excitement. Coming down from it normally filled her with depression, with a need for the human comfort she had always denied herself. She wasn’t depressed now though. She was desperate. Hungry.

Her hand tore at the small snaps on his shirt, flipping the edges apart before her arms curled around his neck. The silk of his hair was a comfort against her palms, but the heat of his body was a fire in winter, warming all the cold lonely places inside her.

And she needed more of him. Before she completely understood exactly what she was doing, she was trying to climb his body. Her thighs wrapped around his as she pressed her aching pussy into the wedge of his cock, rubbing against him, moaning in exquisite pleasure as his hands gripped the cheeks of her ass and held her to him as they ate at each other’s lips.

The kisses were intoxicating, fiery. Harmony felt the cold burn beneath her flesh retreating as they became deeper, hungrier.

“Goddamned office isn’t the place for this.” Lance tore his lips from hers as he moved, his voice husky, lusty.

Harmony gasped as he lowered them to the small couch across the room. With her legs wrapped around his hips and his body now coming over hers, the press of his cock against her sensitive flesh was firmer, more heated.

“Oh, I like that.” She shifted beneath him, her hips stroking over the hard, jeans-covered erection.

“I bet you do.” The half laugh, half grunt had a small smile tugging at her lips. “We’re going to keep fucking in my office, I’m going to end up fired.”

“I’ll protect you.” She panted as his head lowered, his lips moving to her neck. “Tell them I held a gun to your head… Oh God. Lance…” His hands slid beneath her top, cupping her breasts with firm, demanding fingers as his teeth raked over her neck.

“Like that?” He nipped at her neck, then soothed the little pleasure-pain with his tongue.

“Oh, I like,” she moaned, arching closer to him, gasping as he gripped her nipples in his thumbs and forefingers and rolled them deliciously. “I like that too.”

She was panting, drunk with pleasure. She had held herself back from him despite the demands of her body, and she realized then that it was only making the need grow.

“God, you taste good.” He came back to her lips, covering them, taking them both on a mindless journey of pleasure as Harmony writhed beneath him.

“Lance, I need more.” She pressed her hips closer as his lips moved back to her neck, then lower to her collarbone. “I need more now.”

“In a minute. One taste at a time,” he growled as she arched her back, feeling his lips moving over the upper curves of her breasts that her snug shirt revealed.

Other books

The Charnel Prince by Greg Keyes
How to Wash a Cat by Rebecca M. Hale
Urban Renewal (Urban Elite Book 1) by Suzanne Steele, Stormy Dawn Weathers
A Deadly Love by Jannine Gallant
Never a City So Real by Alex Kotlowitz
Just Like Other Daughters by Colleen Faulkner
Encounters: stories by Elizabeth Bowen, Robarts - University of Toronto
Dream On by Gilda O'Neill
Antagonist - Childe Cycle 11 by Gordon R Dickson, David W Wixon