Prickly Business (21 page)

Read Prickly Business Online

Authors: Piper Vaughn & Kenzie Cade

BOOK: Prickly Business
10.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Avery grabbed his mug of tea and took a sip. There probably wouldn’t be any sleep for him tonight. Ah, well. No rest for the wicked. Or apparently for hedgehogs trying to stop the wicked either.

 

 

D
YLAN
FELT
stir-crazy. Maybe just plain crazy.

With a sigh, he flipped through the channels again. Two hundred fifty-eight of them and nothing on. He wanted to throw the remote. Hard. Hear it shatter against the wall. But he put a muzzle on that urge. Barely. Instead he leaned against the sofa and stared at the ceiling.

This was Avery’s fault. He was driving Dylan insane by holding him at arm’s length.

Of course, Dylan didn’t have any proof other than the short, distracted answers he got from Avery when they talked on the phone. That was only
if
Avery picked up.

Three days. That’s how long it had been since the talk that clued Dylan in to the fact Avery might be keeping something from him. Maybe he was just being paranoid. Then the call and the shopping adventure with Jaden. And an overall general lack of communication on the verge of radio silence. Had Dylan not called Avery in the first place, he had a feeling he wouldn’t have heard from his mate at all.

It was clear something was bothering Avery, and it was driving Dylan mad.

He glanced down at his phone. To call or not to call. Three days wasn’t that much time, so no, calling again wasn’t an option. And why did he care so damned much? Dylan was the hunter not the hunted. He got what he wanted when he wanted it.

So why was he sitting at home pining over the errant hedgehog?

He wasn’t. That was his answer. Not any longer. In his life, if he’d ever learned one thing, it was that if he wanted something, he had to take it.

Decision made. No more waiting around for Avery to come to him. Dylan was going to his mate.

After throwing on his coat, he snatched up his keys and helmet. Time to find out what was up with Avery.

If nothing else, the ride through the city soothed him. Cathartic—that was the only way to describe the relationship between a man and his bike. The rumbling of the engine, the metal beast that vibrated beneath him, and the open roads—it was everything he loved. Everything he’d ever wanted. It was freedom.

By the time he pulled up in front of Avery’s building, Dylan’s earlier frustration seemed a thing of the past. That was until he looked up at the loft itself and thought about what—or rather, who—waited up there. And fuck if Dylan wasn’t mad at himself for not believing in Avery, but it wasn’t like he could contain the doubts.

Since when did Dylan need to be reassured of anything?

Then again, they’d only been on talking terms—without throwing carefully aimed barbs at each other—for a few weeks.

At the front door, Dylan debated buzzing Avery, but as luck would have it, a man opened the door right before he pressed Avery’s button. Dylan caught the handle and held it open for him. The guy winked at Dylan, and…. Nothing. Not even the tiniest of sparks. He was just Dylan’s type too. Tall, dark, and scruffy. As lean as the day is long. And when the guy trotted away, obviously taking Dylan’s nonresponse as a lack of interest, Dylan wondered if his type had changed.

Chasing after blond, sassy hedgehogs seemed to be his MO these days.

It was something he’d ponder another day. Right now he was on a mission.

Slipping into the building was simple (if any of the residents in the lobby noticed him stealing into the building, none spoke up), and the elevator ride up was quick. Soon he was in front of Avery’s door and knocking.

Nothing could have prepared him for what he saw when Avery opened the door—clothes disheveled, hair sticking out in all directions, and dark circles painted in the caverns beneath his eyes. The surprise in Avery’s eyes was only overshadowed by his exhaustion. Still, it couldn’t hide his beauty.

Even worn out, Avery was gorgeous—all long, lean, and luscious. Dylan had to admit the way a chunk of hair flopped into Avery’s face was adorable too.

Not waiting for an invitation, Dylan pushed his way into the loft, forcing Avery to back up until he was pressed against the wall. Dylan didn’t stop at Avery’s gasp. After kicking the door closed, he crowded Avery, drawn to him like a magnet. Avery planted his hands on Dylan’s chest—to push him away or pull him closer. All he could see was Avery, his mate, tired, vulnerable, and needing… him. Dylan didn’t know how he knew, but something inside him told him Avery needed him. His comfort. His strength. His warmth.

Avery shivered and the openness in his big eyes teased at Dylan’s restraint. He was there for a reason, and he wasn’t letting that go, but it had been days that felt like weeks since he’d last seen his mate, felt him, tasted him. It wasn’t reassurance he was looking for. It was that connection. The link that reinforced the bond between them every single day.

“You haven’t called,” Dylan rasped.

Then Avery whimpered and Dylan broke. He laced his fingers through Avery’s hair and tugged lightly, drawing a gasp from Avery’s slack mouth. Taking in his mate—his scent, his elegance even in his drained state—he watched Avery’s tongue dart out to wet his lips. Dylan wanted to know—
needed
to know—that Avery was there. With him. That the past few days hadn’t created an irrevocable, gaping chasm between them. But first he needed to touch Avery, hear him moan.

Dylan pressed his mouth to Avery’s and pushed his tongue into Avery’s mouth. Avery’s hands grappled for purchase, sliding from Dylan’s waist, over his chest, and finally clutching at his shoulders, holding on for dear life.

The kiss was brutal and punishing. As if awakened from his haze, Avery returned the passion, sucking on Dylan’s bottom lip, then slipping his tongue between Dylan’s lips to join the play. One of them groaned low and dirty, and Dylan didn’t know if it was him or Avery. It didn’t matter.

When the need for air was too much, Dylan pulled away but only long enough to catch his breath. He slid one hand down and curled it around Avery’s hip, drawing him closer. With the one hand remaining in Avery’s hair, he tugged once more, exposing his long, graceful neck. Dylan dove back in, scraped his teeth over Avery’s jaw, down the column of his neck and to the junction at his shoulder. Everything in him yearned for this link, demanded he take Avery and make him his. It would be so easy to bite, to cement everything between them so Avery couldn’t get away.

“Dylan.” Avery’s fingers dug harder into Dylan’s shoulders. He’d have bruises later and that idea set him on fire. Being marked, ever so slightly, by his mate.

Avery’s breathy plea and the stretch of his neck that gave Dylan more access to that creamy, silky skin left no doubt in Dylan’s mind what his mate wanted, but at the same time it knocked some sense into him.

Everything in Dylan cried out with the need to mark Avery. It beat in him like a compulsion. With a rumble, Dylan dipped his nose into the juncture of Avery’s neck and shoulder, inhaling the scent of his mate. Except something deep inside Dylan craved more, needed Avery’s scent to meld with his own. Rubbing his face and neck into Avery, Dylan prayed his wolf would be satisfied with scent marking for now. Avery’s moan spurred him on as he licked a path from neck to collarbone, tracing his way to the opposite side so he could mark Avery thoroughly.

Avery let out a breathy laugh. “If you pee on me next, I’m leaving and not coming back.”

Dylan froze. What was he doing? They’d only begun getting to know each other for the past few weeks. Hell, Dylan was having trouble getting a lock on his mate as it was. Avery was all over the place, hot one second and cold the next. Why was Dylan even giving thought to forming a bond that Avery likely didn’t want? It was the heat of the moment. They hadn’t even broached the subject of them being mates in the first place. No, it was probably lust speaking for Avery.

That thought at the forefront of his mind, Dylan’s ardor cooled. Panting, he pulled his mouth away and turned his cheek against Avery’s shoulder. It grounded him, as did the sounds of Avery’s harsh breaths slowing as well. Dropping a kiss to the place that would quite possibly display his bite one day, Dylan straightened but didn’t move away. Instead he stood captivated by Avery and the insecurity, vulnerability, and no small amount of hurt filling his hazel depths. Dylan’s first order of business was to fix that.

He touched his forehead to Avery’s and with their lips only breaths apart, whispered, “When it’s time, we’ll both know.”

Avery squeezed his eyes closed and nodded slowly.

When Dylan finally stepped back, Avery’s hands fell from his shoulders. He missed the weight of Avery’s touch, missed the way Avery gave everything over to him. It was almost enough to forget all the reasons he shouldn’t and dive back in.

Almost.

He held out his hand and smiled when Avery didn’t hesitate to grasp it.

“Come on. We need to talk,” he said solemnly

The openness he’d witnessed in Avery immediately shuttered, replaced with wariness and resignation.

Dylan should have known, although it didn’t stop him from moving them through the kitchen and into the living room. He situated himself in the corner of the couch and pulled Avery down beside him. Without a sound, Avery tucked himself against Dylan’s side and rested his head on Dylan’s shoulder. Apprehension filled the silence between them, but still Dylan didn’t speak. He took a moment to ponder his mate and survey their surroundings.

The place wasn’t messy, per se, but it was obvious things were out of order. A few records littered the coffee table and a jean jacket hung precariously over the opposite arm of the couch. On the small dining room table, papers were scattered about and his laptop was open to a missing persons’ website. The closer Dylan looked at the things around him, including Avery, the less sense it all made.

“What’s going on, Avery?”

Another beat of silence. Dylan glanced down at his mate. He could just about see the thoughts flit through Avery’s mind, but not lies. Somehow Dylan knew whatever was going through Avery’s head, whatever he was hiding would all come out here and if not now, then soon.

All of his protective instincts roared to life, and Dylan wanted nothing more than to shelter Avery from this thing he was dealing with.
Alone. He’s trying to do it alone. Without help.
Dylan wanted to rail at the thought of Avery doing this (no matter what
this
was) by himself. He’d known Avery wasn’t the type of man who asked for help. Whether it was pride or fear or a combination of both, it was obvious his mate wouldn’t come out and ask. Dylan would have to offer.

“Come on, brat.” Dylan kept his voice soft and absent of teasing, even as the nickname slipped out. It wasn’t a moment of humor, yet the name on his lips felt more like an endearment than an insult. “You know you can talk to me, right? Whatever it is, I want to help. I… I don’t like seeing you like this. Let me in.”

Chapter Twelve

 

 

N
ESTLED
CLOSE
to Dylan’s side on the couch, Avery hesitated to answer his question. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to share with Dylan. He did. Avery had realized over the last few days that he couldn’t handle the Lacey situation without someone to talk to, and he wanted to unburden himself on his mate. But something told him Dylan wouldn’t react well to what he’d been doing.

Slowly the warmth and security of Dylan’s embrace eased Avery’s tension. He went limp against Dylan, nuzzling his face into Dylan’s shirt, inhaling his scent. The dam inside him broke as his mate’s presence soothed him, and the story of Mr. Otis and Lacey spilled out of Avery in a flood. He told Dylan the reason for the invitation to Howl, where he’d been on Saturday night, and what he’d been doing since then.

When he wasn’t making deliveries, he’d been online, searching tirelessly, poring over websites about missing persons in Oregon and the surrounding states. So many people just disappeared every year, never to be seen or heard from again. A lot of them were women—pretty teenagers whose lives had barely started. He even found a few interviews with girls who worked in the sex trade where they described how it all began and discussed the young men and women who seduced and lured them into selling themselves.

Depressing couldn’t begin to describe it. That afternoon, when Avery had returned to his loft after his deliveries, he’d filled his tub with warm water, shifted into his hedgehog form, and spent some indeterminate amount of time curled up into a ball, just floating on his back in lazy circles, trying not to think. Of course, he couldn’t shut his brain off.

If Lacey had been taken or sold off as a sex slave, how would he ever find her? Where would he even begin to look? The most obvious path was to try to find Troy and figure out his involvement, if any. But for that, he’d have to loiter at Howl every night, hoping Troy showed up again, and that if he did, he’d actually be willing to talk. Though if Troy
was
involved, what reason would he have to admit as much to Avery? No man would simply confess to being a sex trafficker, except maybe under the threat of death or a prison sentence.

Avery wasn’t exactly intimidating. But Dylan…. Dylan sure as hell could be. Maybe he’d be willing to help.

Judging from the pissed-off expression on Dylan’s face when he finished his story, Avery didn’t think his help with investigating Lacey’s disappearance would be forthcoming.

Dylan’s jaw clenched tight and a vein throbbed in his temple. “Avery,” he said, slow and measured, as if he was fighting to keep his voice calm. “Don’t you think you should leave this to the professionals? Look what happened with Victor. You got in way over your head. If you thought messing with him was dangerous, imagine what men who kidnap young girls and sell them into sexual slavery might do to you if they caught you poking into their business.”

Avery pulled out of Dylan’s hold. “But the cops haven’t gotten anywhere in the two months Lacey’s been missing, and the pack dismissed Mr. Otis when he told them he thought something bad had happened. He doesn’t have anyone else to help him. Why shouldn’t I?”

Other books

Smitten by Janet Evanovich
Don't Tempt Me by Loretta Chase
Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore
The Bridges Of Madison County by Robert James Waller
Dead Men's Boots by Mike Carey
Chewing Rocks by Alan Black
In the Enemy's Arms by Marilyn Pappano