Nic leaned back against the tiles, enjoying her touch as she scrubbed him down.
“God, Fiona, I missed you.”
Her hands gentled as she washed his jutting cock. It was more beautiful than she remembered, thick, brown, its tip like velvet.
“I can see that.” She resumed her scrubbing as she moved to his thighs. He had the most beautiful body she’d ever seen, and it was going to be hers for the rest of her life.
“Nic, I need you.” He took the soap from her and spread thick lather over her, starting with her breasts and then gliding lower, sending her liquid heat surging.
Falling to his knees, he kissed her belly and then ran soapy hands over it.
“Making love won’t hurt the baby, will it?” Nic frowned up at her.
“No, Nic. It won’t hurt the baby.”
“Good. I don’t want to hold back. Not right now.” He covered her dark mound with soap, his fingers questing between her folds.
Fiona’s body called to his and he answered her.
— • —
Far away, a lizard danced on the branch of a tree.
— • —
Farther away, in a dark room below the lowest basement of the Smithsonian, the Board of Elders met. There were five new members, all females, who, according to their first vote, from now on were to be referred to as women, not “females” and not “bitches.”
The males refused to change their designations. One of the women had moved for it to be “jerks,” but it was stricken from the records before being seconded. The males had kept the majority. Still, times had changed, power had shifted, and heads had rolled. It had been business as usual.
The meeting came to order. The secretary, a thin, pale vampire who’d managed to keep his position since no one else wanted it, read the minutes of the last month's meeting. They were seconded and approved.
The director of the Board, a powerful vampire who had held on to his position for the last two hundred years with cunning, wit, and ruthlessness, rose to address both the new and old members.
“Is there any new business?” His deep voice rumbled off the brick walls of the room. Looking down the long table where the other twelve members sat, he waited.
Lila pushed back her chair and stood to address the Council for the first time as a new member of the Board of Elders.
“The murderers of Marcos, one of the most respected and longtime members of this honored Board, and the other slain brethren, must not be allowed to go free. Vampire and mortal alike, they must be hunted down and punished.” She looked each of the Board members in the eyes.
“I call for vendetta.”
Theodora Lane was born in the South and raised by her grandmother, who taught her the art of the backhanded compliment, how to make sweet tea, and that you can never have too many husbands, just not at the same time.
By day Theodora lives an unassuming life, having lunch with the ladies, attending baby showers, and playing refined card games. By night, she writes wickedly sexy and funny stories, hangs out in bars, and gathers ideas for her next book.
http://www.lynnlorenz.com/about-thedora/
Taliesin Publishing thrives on introducing you to new authors and stories. If you enjoyed this book, please continue reading for excepts of two additional stories we think you’ll love. And if you do, please spread the word.
Coming August 1, 2013
“Have fun. Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.” Mackenzie Rogers snorted in her sister’s direction and took another bite of her Lucky Charms. No matter how old she got, she’d never be too old for the perfect bite of marshmallows and cereal.
“You’re kidding, right?” Kathleen stopped midstride between the fridge and the table. “You aren’t really going to skip the gathering, are you? Mom and Dad will have a fit.”
“They can fly a kite for all I care. That stupid bi-annual event makes me want to vomit. No way in hell am I going to participate in such a farce again this year.” Mackenzie took another bite, crunching into the cereal and spooning up a balanced combo for her next bite.
Kath took a seat next to Kenzie and grabbed for the red box of sugary goodness. “Hey, you ate almost all of this.”
Kenzie smiled through a mouthful. “Uh-huh.” She swallowed. “And it’s the last box too.”
“Who peed in your cereal this morning?” Kath scowled.
“Nobody. I’m perfectly happy. I have a nice human boyfriend, a college degree, a job, and plenty of friends. I’m about as fantastic as a person can get.” She smiled at her sister. “I sure don’t need to attend some match festival to find some barbaric mate. Been there. Done that. Have the mental scars to prove it.”
Kathleen narrowed her gaze at Kenzie. “I don’t know what happened to you two years ago, but that was last time. How do you know this gathering will be the same? You were only twenty-one last festival. Now, you’re more…mature…sometimes.” Kath ducked when Kenzie swung at her sister’s head, managing to swat her on the top.
“And now I’m wiser. Older. Less stupid. And in no need of a matchmaking service. Boyfriend, remember? Human boyfriend. Sexy, human boyfriend who has a job and likes me for who I am.” Kath had no idea that Kenzie’s mental scars went way deeper than just the last gathering. The events of two years ago paled in comparison to what happened four years ago. Mackenzie kept those details to herself, buried deep inside.
“Really? And who does he think you are exactly? Have you told him about your tendency to shift into a wolf now and then and run free in the forest?” Kath grinned big.
Of course Kenzie hadn’t told him anything of the sort. And she never intended to. “What makes you such an expert? How many guys have you dated, smarty pants?” Kenzie knew her sister hadn’t dated a single guy. She was just twenty-one herself.
“That’s why I’m going to the gathering, smartass. Dating humans is a pain in the butt. It can’t go anywhere long term. Sure, you have a degree and a pseudo-job, but your human boyfriend is a farce, and all those friends you claim to have are really his.” Kathleen’s honesty was over-the-top.
“When I need your opinion next time, I’ll ask for it.”
It was tough being a shapeshifter and living among regular humans. Stressful at best. Downright annoying most of the time. Wolves could scent almost anything. Fear. Anxiety. Stress. Arousal… It gave them both an advantage and a disadvantage. It sucked royally when Kenzie was out with friends and realized one of them didn’t like her. That was why wolves tended to mate with their own kind. It was so much easier than dealing with the nuances of the human world.
But Kenzie had no interest in following wolf tradition and allowing some supposed ruling of fate to determine who, where, and when she mated. It sickened her. She was in control of her own destiny. Definitely.
And lately, things were looking up. Darrell adored her. He was the first man she’d ever dated who truly enjoyed her company, didn’t pressure her to have sex, and smelled fantastically of…well, Darrell. Nothing was going to ruin the human high she was enjoying.
“Have you told Mom and Dad this decision yet?” Kath tipped her bowl and drank the rest of the sugary milk.
“Nope.” She was putting it off.
“We’re leaving in about an hour, ya know. For the opening day.”
“Yep. And like I said, have fun.” Kenzie scooted her chair back, letting it scrape against the floor with an annoying screech that always pissed her sister off.
“Mackenzie Renae, how many times have I asked you not to do that? It scratches the wood floor and…” Kenzie’s mother, Carina, paused midsentence. “Why aren’t you dressed?”
Kathleen chuckled. “’Cause she isn’t going with us.” She ran from the room. The bitch.
Their youngest sister, nineteen-year-old Cassidy, came in on her mother’s heels. “What’s going on? Why is Kath running?”
Kenzie’s mother didn’t look amused. As Kenzie deposited her bowl in the sink, her mother stared her down. “Tell me this is some sort of joke? What, are you sick?”
“Nope. But I would be if I let you drag me to the mating event of the year.” Kenzie skirted her mother and hoped to escape the room before World War III broke out.
“Sit down.” Her mother was taking prisoners today.
Great
.
“Mom, I’m twenty-three. Don’t you think I should be allowed to make my own choices by now?” Kenzie worked hard to keep a whine out of her voice as she plopped back into the chair she’d vacated, careful not to scrape the floor. That wouldn’t make her sound as grown up as she insisted, and it sure wouldn’t help her case.
“As the oldest in this family, don’t you think you owe it to your sisters to attend with them? They’re counting on you for guidance. Reassurance.” Her mother sat in the chair Kath had vacated while Cassidy grabbed the orange juice and joined the bantering.
“Mom, they’re both grown adults themselves. They do not need me for anything. That’s ridiculous and you know it.”
“It’s typical for the oldest child to pave the way, so to speak.” Her mom lowered her voice to übercalm, as though it would change Kenzie’s mind. “Besides, we are so fortunate to live only fifteen minutes from the gathering. People come from all over the country to this event, and you take it for granted. You’re not getting any younger.”
“Good grief. Are we seriously having this conversation? Do you realize how absurd you sound? By human standards, I’m young.”
“You aren’t human, Mackenzie.” Her mother eyed her over the top of her glasses after she lowered them from her hair. They were a constant hairband when she wasn’t reading. Forever stuck in the soft brown curls all the women in the family sported.
“I don’t have any interest in playing nice with the other wolves in the mating dance, Mom. Sniffing each other out in that stupid replica of the one-minute dating game is barbaric.” She shivered as the thought and memories of the disaster from two years ago assaulted her. That event had not been kind to her.
No one knew what had happened when Kenzie was only nineteen, either. And she intended to keep it that way. Suffice it to say, she had no interest in the mating ritual.
“You do realize we live in the middle of Oklahoma, right? This isn’t exactly a prime area for finding a mate. If you don’t attend the gathering, you’re just blowing another opportunity.” Her mother shook her head in dismay.
Kenzie sighed. “I have a boyfriend. He’s perfect. I don’t need a wolf sticking his nose all up in my business.”
“Darrell’s gay,” Cassidy interjected. “And you know it. If you would stop spreading your feathers like a peacock for one minute, you’d see the truth of it.”
What the fuck? Sweet innocent Cassidy weighs in, and this is what she has to say? And what is this, gang up on Kenzie’s boyfriend day?
“Cassidy,” her mother admonished. “Watch your language.”
Cassidy smirked. “Gay? Mom, what’s wrong with the word gay?”
Her mother chose to ignore the comment.
Kenzie did not. “Why on earth would you say that?” Kathleen had implied something similar.
“Come on, Kenz. I have excellent gaydar, and you apparently do not.” Cassidy rolled her eyes.
“Stop it, girls. Listen, your father is going to be downstairs any minute. Please go get ready.” Her mother stood and turned toward the sink.
Kenzie narrowed her gaze at her mother’s back and fumed. She crossed her arms over her chest. She still wore a simple T-shirt and cotton shorts, the same thing she’d worn to bed last night. She’d have a longer leg to stand on if she didn’t still live with her parents. As it was, her degree in early childhood development had landed her a job at the local YMCA working with disabled children. She loved the work, but it didn’t pay well enough for her to move out of the house.
Her mother turned and leaned warily against the counter. “Why, Kenzie? Why can’t you just go along with the family and try to enjoy yourself?”
Because the stupid thing is a farce, and I can’t stand men pawing at me like I’m some kind of candy
. It unnerved her. Especially after that crazy he-wolf had tried to corner her in the hall and make out with her, insisting she was “the one.” His breath had been revolting, and she’d had no feelings for him whatsoever. And she wasn’t even going to dip further back in the memory bank to the gathering before that one. A wise woman would seal that experience off eternally. She shivered. “I have a date with Darrell this evening.”
“Doing what?” Cass asked. “Hanging out with his friends, most of whom are girls, none of whom are really your friends. Just his. Don’t you realize why he has so many girl friends?”
“No, Cass. But do tell me,” Kenzie mocked.
“Because girls like to hang out with gay guys. They’re safe.” Cass ducked and fled the room when Kenzie threw the empty box of cereal at her.
Kenzie’s cell phone vibrated on the table. She glanced at the text from Darrell.
“Kenz, sorry, can’t make it tonight, family plans. Rain check?”
Shit. She groaned and glanced back at her mother. “One day. I’m not attending tomorrow. Just today. And only so long as nobody tries to claim me. If they do, I’m out of there.”
Her mother smiled. “Agreed.”
— • —
Drake Spencer dragged himself out of the hotel bed and headed for the adjoining bathroom without opening his eyes more than a slit. It was late—later than he ever slept at home—but he’d needed the catch-up sleep, and now he felt groggy because of it.
“What time is it?” his brother asked.
“Sorry, man. Didn’t mean to wake you. It’s about ten. We need to get a move on. Dan and Scott are probably wondering what the heck we’re doing in here. I’m jumping in the shower.” Their brothers were in the next room down. He didn’t hear a sound coming through that wall. Perhaps they were sleeping late also. His parents had the room on the other side, and he knew they’d left earlier.
“’K.” Jerrod flopped back down and pulled the blanket over his head. He was only eleven, the baby in the family and an accident of maximum proportions, but Drake adored him, as did everyone else.