Ruffskin

Read Ruffskin Online

Authors: Megan Derr

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: Ruffskin
11.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Table of Contents

Title Page

Book Details

Ruffskin

About the Author

Ruffskin
Megan Derr

An ordinary rainy day at the Bremen is interrupted when a strange courier shows up with a package for Peyton Blue, the Bremen's much-loved owner and bartender. When the package turns out to be a piece of Peyton's past and brings that past violently into the present, it is up to Johnnie to resolve a years old problem and put the past where it belongs once and for all.

Ruffskin takes place after Dance in the Dark, and is best read after that story.

Book Details

Ruffskin

By Megan Derr

Published by Less Than Three Press LLC

All rights reserved.  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission of the publisher, except for the purpose of reviews.

Edited by Samantha M. Derr

Cover designed by London Burden

This book is a work of fiction and as such all characters and situations are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual people, places, or events is coincidental.

First Edition March 2012

Copyright © 2012 by Megan Derr

Printed in the United States of America

ISBN 9781620041093

The quotes used by Johnnie and Grim were pulled from the following sources:

The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations by Subject
Edited by Susan Ratcliffe

ISBN 978-0-19-860750-2

21
st
Century Dictionary of Quotations
Edited by The Princeton Language Institute

ISBN 0-440-21447-5

Grimm's Complete Fairy Tales
Barnes & Noble Books edition

ISBN 0-88029-519-8

The Complete Works of Edgar Allen Poe

ISBN 978-0-40-405109-9

Ruffskin

"What did I tell you?" Johnnie snapped, slapping Grim's hands away. "Do not touch me. If you want to touch, you can go back to your stupid ex. I said do not touch me!" Slapping at Grim's hands again, he turned and stalked across the bar to the pool table, leaving Grim to hang up their wet, muddy coats. Angry, he yanked down his cue stick from the rack.

The balls were already racked, ready, and waiting. The bar, thankfully, was empty.  It had been nothing but rain, rain, and more rain the past few days. Locals were braced for the hurricane season not far off, and to judge by the already foul weather, it was going to be an interesting summer.

Johnnie struck, sending balls scattering, wishing each and every one of them was the head of the pretty little witch who had all but plastered himself to Grim while they'd been out shopping. And right in front of him! Like Johnnie did not even exist.

That
was easily rectified, to be certain. If the fool was stupid enough to give his name, then he could suffer the consequences of being blacklisted by Desrosiers. See who had the audacity to get overly friendly with what belonged to Johnnie after that.

A hand touched his back, startling him, and Johnnie jerked away. He was immediately pulled back into Grim's arms. "Leave me—mmf—" He bit down hard on Grim's lip, thoroughly annoyed that Grim was not listening to him, the insufferable ass. "What did I say about not touching me?" he asked icily when Grim finally broke the kiss.

Grim rolled his eyes. "I have no idea; I've been ignoring everything that comes out of your pretty little mouth since we finally escaped Weston."

Johnnie made a show of haughty indifference. "Weston, was it?"

"You know very well what his name was," Grim said, looking amused, which was entirely inappropriate for the situation. "I do not doubt within the hour you'll know everything about him and ensure he is not welcome in half the buildings in the city."

Sneering, Johnnie said nothing, only turned away and tried to go back to his game. Half, indeed. He was going to be far more thorough than that. Grim pulled him back once again and held him firmly in place by an arm around his waist, while the other captured his wrists, pinning them to his chest.

"Let me go," Johnnie hissed, twisting his head—and jerking it back around when Grim's proved to be far too close.

Then that hot toddy voice poured over him and made him shiver despite himself. "As much as I love it when you get all lordly and snotty, Highness, jealousy does not become you."

Johnnie said nothing, only shivered again when warm lips trailed along the skin of his throat. What was he supposed to say? The stupid witch had been beautiful and skilled and obviously more than willing to renew his old relationship with Grim. A witch like that was probably far less complicated and troublesome than Johnnie, and he and Grim had looked good together.

He knew Grim would not leave him, but it was hard to convince old fears of that.

"Honestly, Johnnie, you're getting jealous over nothing."

"Trifles light as air/Are to the jealous confirmations strong/As proofs of holy writ," Johnnie replied.

"Shakespeare, is it?" Grim asked, amused. "You are in a snit." Johnnie said nothing, merely jerked his head to the side when Grim tried to kiss his neck. "He cheated on me, you know," Grim said quietly. "He thinks I don't know, but you know how well I can see things that people don't know
can
be seen."

Johnnie narrowed his eyes at that and decided blacklisting the bastard was not good enough.

"Stop plotting all the princely things you can do to him," Grim said with a chuckle, breath hot against Johnnie's skin. "He's well in the past, and I would much rather focus on my beautiful, if hostile, present."

Relenting a little bit, Johnnie said, "How would you react if you ran across one of my ex's?"

Grim laughed. "You do not have any ex's. If you
had
, your father would have taken care of them long before I arrived."

"I hate you," Johnnie replied and struggled to get free so he could inflict bodily harm.

"If you think I am letting you go just so you can hit me," Grim said, still laughing, "then you are sorely mistaken, Highness."

"You'll have to let me go event—" The words broke off on a hiss when Grim bit the back of his neck, nuzzled at his throat, and Johnnie decided he would delay the hitting slightly if—

Johnnie nearly fell forward onto the pool table when Grim abruptly let him go as the door slammed open. He scowled at the intruder, who at present was nothing more than a raincoat and what seemed to be buckets of water pouring off him. The man had better have burst in for a very good reason.

"Sorry!" the man said, and pulled off his raincoat, hanging it up on one of the hooks by the door and adding to the mess already put there by Johnnie and Grim's coats.

Johnnie picked up his cue stick, setting it aside while he racked the balls to start over.

"Sorry to barge in and make a mess," the man repeated.  "Especially as loudly as I did; I'm afraid the wind got the better of me." As if in agreement or protest, the wind rattled at the door, threatening to slam it open again.

"No worries," Grim said. "Can we help you with something?"

The man pulled down the brim of his flat cap, hiding his face. Johnnie realized then that they had yet to get a good look at him. "I'm looking for Peyton Blue?" the man said, phrasing it as a question, as if not certain what Peyton looked like—yet Johnnie had the distinct impression he knew neither of them was Peyton.

"He's in the back," Johnnie said even as Grim darted off to fetch him.

Curiosity snared, Johnnie abandoned the pool table and wandered over to the bar, closer to the man. He was dressed in a drab polo and worn jeans, but Johnnie could not make out the insignia on the polo, covered as it was by the light hoodie the man wore over the polo. He wore no jewelry to speak of, and his hair was hidden. Nothing about him stood out or was remotely memorable. The man was trying very hard to give nothing of himself away.

Johnnie moved closer, smiling congenially as though he were attending some interminable social function. "So what brings you out in this wretched weather?"

"Uh—business," the man said. "Delivery. Man said the package couldn't wait, had to be delivered today, the sooner the better."

"Package?" Johnnie echoed. But before he could press further, Peyton appeared, wiping his hands on a towel, with Grim just behind him.

The delivery man jumped, and Johnnie eyed him askance. The man then stepped forward and thrust a small brown box into Peyton's hands. "For you," he said, and Johnnie caught the faintest tremble in the man's voice.

Then suddenly the man turned and bolted, door slamming behind him—his raincoat was still hanging beside Johnnie's on the hooks by the door.

"What in the world was that all about?" Peyton asked aloud. He looked at the package, frowning. "Should I open this?"

Johnnie took it and examined the box carefully. "I don't smell or sense anything."

"Nothing seems amiss," Grim added. "Maybe Johnnie was just making him nervous?"

"Be silent or I'll give you good cause to be nervous," Johnnie retorted. Grim only smirked.

Peyton rolled his eyes at them, and then began to peel off the brown paper, revealing a black velvet jeweler's box, but deeper and wider than usual.  There were no markings to speak of. So it was a generic box, or the contents were from a store too low-end to bother stamping their boxes.

Pulling off the lid, Peyton drew a sharp breath, and all the color drained from his face—then he threw the box, contents and all, on the bar and bolted out the door, bellowing for the messenger.

Johnnie flicked his fingers at Grim and said haughtily, "Fetch."

"Yes, Highness," Grim replied and vanished.

Alone, Johnnie helped himself to the box. Inside was a handsome watch. He would not have minded seeing it in his collection. But then, a Rolex was always a nice thing to have. He turned it over, examining every minute detail, and somehow was not surprised to see an inscription.

To Peyt, Love Ruff

Who was Ruff?

Johnnie continued to examine the watch, but nothing else caught his eye. Setting it on the bar, he moved around the bar and poured himself a vodka rocks. He'd just taken his second sip when the door opened and Grim and Peyton returned.

"Gone," Peyton said bitterly.

Johnnie looked to Grim, who just shook his head. "He can hide."

Which meant he was hiding even the energies that Grim could see.
That
was expensive, like in the millions expensive. "Impressive." Such a charm would have to contain demon blood, the only other race that could see energies. He set down his drink and picked up the watch again. "Anyone who can afford to give a Rolex, however, can clearly afford fancy charms to hide himself."

Grim snorted. "Meaning we're looking for one of your ilk."

Johnnie ignored him. "Who gave you a Rolex, Peyton?"

"No one—I mean, he never got the chance," Peyton said, and he sat on a barstool with a sigh. "I admired his, once, and this was years ago mind. After that, he kept teasing and promising about getting me one. I told him not to because we were on opposite ends of the pack. Being friends was one thing; him giving me a gift, never mind an expensive one—that was something else entirely."

"Who was he?"

"The alpha's only child," Peyton replied. "His son, name is Hudson Blue. Younger than me by seven years. He was born premature. All their previous attempts to have children had ended in miscarriages or stillborns, so they were fiercely protective of Hudson. 'Ruff' was my nickname for him. We shouldn't have been friends, but we were." His expression said that they had clearly been more than friends, but the Rolex had already hinted at that.

Johnnie poured a beer and slid it across the bar to Peyton. "You said once that you left the pack because of things that went down and were going to keep going down."

"Yeah," Peyton said bitterly, looking three times his age suddenly. "Murder. The Alpha and his Candidates were abusive, malicious, and downright cruel. After they wound up killing a couple of pups, me and another wolf simply couldn't take it anymore. Kipling was his name. We killed the Alpha and the Candidates. All of them. Then we ran. Kipling went one way; I went another."

"Blue never really got another Alpha, not in all these years," Johnnie commented. "The pack is a mess."

"Yeah," Peyton said. "Like I said, crap is just going to keep happening."

"Whatever happened to Hudson?"

"I don't know," Peyton said quietly. "I've wanted to contact him for years, but didn't dare. If the pack finds me, I'm a dead man, and I don't know what they'd do to him if they thought we were staying in touch. But I've always wished I'd gotten to tell him goodbye—" He broke off and shook his head. "I always hoped he would do okay. His mother was crazy protective of him; I thought that would be enough to protect him from the rest of the pack."

Johnnie said, "He was just here and gave you that watch."

"He must be in danger," Peyton said. "I have to think something is wrong, because otherwise wouldn't he just come see me instead of acting this way? But maybe not. I don't know anymore." He raked a hand through his hair, miserable and confused.

Other books

Eyes by Joanne Fluke
Open Roads by Zach Bohannon
The Origin of Sorrow by Robert Mayer
The Barefoot Queen by Ildefonso Falcones
The War Planners by Andrew Watts
The Fall by Kate Stewart
Feral: Book One by DeHaven, Velvet
She Died Too Young by Lurlene McDaniel
Dancing With the Virgins by Stephen Booth