Midnight Lover
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Synopsis
Rosemary Laurey's newest novel is a wickedly delicious tale of love, lust, and the otherworldly with a decidedly sexy twist. . . There Are Beings Worse Than Vampires. . . Vampire Toby Wise knows there is a spy in his organization. He thinks Laura Fox, the beautiful nurse who looks after the invalid founder of Connor Corp., is one. But Laura is no mere spy--she's a reporter out for a hot story. So when Toby receives a call for aid from a witch, Toby reluctantly involves Laura. There are sinister goings-on in Dark Falls, Oregon. A bloodthirsty beast of the night has been plaguing the town. As Toby struggles with his feelings for the irresistible Laura, she struggles to accept the alluring yet perilous world of the vampires. And as their attraction grows, so does the danger. For the prey they are hunting will prove to be a more deadly predator than either can imagine. . . "Great stuff!" -- Romantic Times on Kiss Me Forever/Love Me Forever
Release date: March 1, 2007
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 352
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Midnight Lover
Rosemary Laurey
Really hungry.
Hungry for the sweet warmth of her mortal blood and the glorious scent of her skin.
Too bad his overactive conscience was giving him such a difficult time. He was vampire. He fed off living mortals. He never harmed them and made certain they had no memory of the event. He’d managed quite nicely for the past century and a half or so. Taking mortal blood for sustenance was what vampires did.
Why was Laura Fox any different?
Because she was.
Damn.
He paid her very well, along with the other nurses who took shifts to care for Piet Connor. The seemingly straightforward plan had been to feed off each of them in turn—necessary since in Oregon he lacked the connections to maintain a constant supply of blood bags. His scheme worked brilliantly until Laura Fox arrived.
After a vampire lifetime of detachment from his food source, Toby Wise had fallen hard and fast. If he had any survival instincts left, he’d replace her. Obviously survival wasn’t as high a priority as it used to be. He couldn’t bear the thought of not seeing her. He grudged her every day off and had to rein in his predatory urges to feed off her every single night she was in the house.
It had been four days, an extraordinarily long four days, and tonight he would indulge, sate his unruly self on the joy of her blood, delight in her soul, inhale the very essence of her being, satisfy every vampire instinct, and be consumed with guilt again at the end of it all.
Damn and double damn. Why in the name of Abel did she affect him this way?
He wasn’t sure he wanted that one answered. He’d seen what happened to his colony fellows: Kit Marlowe, Justin Corvus, and Tom Kyd. One by one, they’d fallen in love and settled into domestic bliss—or at least the nearest vampire equivalent. Yes, they were very content, obviously happy, and delighting in their respective women. Heck, even ice lady Antonia had found herself a worthy mate.
He, Toby Wise, was thrilled for them, but that sort of lifestyle just wasn’t his cup of tea. He’d been a loner since he was seven years old, the day his owner had thrown his mother to the ground and dragged a terrified Toby from her arms. Two days later he’d been sold and shipped off to a plantation in the low country of South Carolina. He’d never seen his mother or seven brothers and sisters again.
No, good friends he had aplenty, but close emotional connections were not for him.
On the other side of the smooth teak door, heartbeats measured two mortal lives. The slower pulse marked Piet Connor’s grasp on his sadly limited existence. The other was strong, steady, and vibrant: the heartbeat of a healthy young woman. Toby listened; there was no movement inside. He waited, just to be sure, and slowly opened the door.
Laura was dozing in an easy chair across the room. The shaded light on the table beside her cast a pool of light that highlighted the glints in her auburn hair and cast odd shadows on her hands. She’d been reading a magazine when she nodded off and right now it slid over the smooth white fabric of her uniform. Toby crossed the room and caught the magazine before it hit the ground. No point in letting unnecessary noise disturb anyone. As he placed her copy of Cosmopolitan on the table, he smiled. Not exactly sedate reading, but much more fun than the tabloids Nurse Watson favored.
Not that Toby felt for efficient, friendly Nurse Watson a hundredth of the desire the mere thought of Laura stirred. A whisper of breath from her slightly parted lips caressed his hand. Her long eyelashes fluttered, brushing her cheeks. Her skin was the color of rich cream and the texture of silk.
He placed his hand on her head, willing her into deeper sleep, resting his fingers on her auburn curls until her breathing changed. Her hair felt different tonight, firmer somehow. Maybe she used one of those sprays or mousses they were always pushing on TV. A pity—he preferred her curls soft and silky so they curled around his fingers.
Yes, all very well, but he could hardly request she pick her shampoo and hair products to suit him! He did, however, permit himself to run his fingers through her hair before tilting her head to one side and loosening the top button to open her collar and expose the smooth, pale column of her neck.
The scent of skin and her firm, steady pulse had him ready. Very ready. His gums itched as his blood hunger rose. Leaning closer, he gently licked over the pulse at the base of her neck and pressed his lips to her skin. He bit carefully and precisely, as only a vampire could, and her blood rose to him. Sweetness, richness, life, and strength flowed from her as he absorbed the sustenance he needed. He drank slowly, very slowly, to prolong the pleasure while taking the least needed.
Her breathing quickened, her body tensed a little as her heartbeat sped. She let out a little sigh and leaned into him.
Talk about temptation!
As he wrapped an arm around her shoulder to hold her steady, he was only too aware of the wondrous warmth of her body, the glorious swell of her breasts and the scent of aroused woman. She was responding to his touch. Never before…or had she and he’d refused to acknowledge? He slowed his tasting but kept his lips on her neck, needing the connection, the link with her mortality, relishing the few moments of intimacy. He held her close, reveling in her scent and warmth. He ran a hand over the curve of her breast and down her belly and back, wanting to feel her skin but knowing that would weaken his resolve. As his lips pulled on her blood, her body tensed more, her hips rocked, her breasts pressed against his arm. His mind joined hers, to share the joy he drew from her. Her heartbeat raced, but with pleasure, not fear. He gathered up his own satisfaction and let it wash over her, filling her mind with her own sweetness until she shuddered as a soft climax rippled through her.
He still held her, waiting until her body calmed and her heartbeat settled. Gently he took his lips away and licked the site of his bite. She’d heal fast and never know what she’d given him. He eased his arm away from her shoulders and stood. He dropped a kiss on her forehead, leaving a suggestion that she wake in fifteen minutes and make herself a cup of the mint tea she so enjoyed, before he disappeared into the shadows.
Toby heard Laura go down the hall to the kitchen in precisely fifteen minutes. She’d take her cup back to Piet’s room and no doubt have a relaxed and peaceful night.
Which was more than he would.
He was strung tight with restlessness. He really should feed somewhere else next time but he knew he wouldn’t. Laura Fox was a drug. A need. He’d keep her close. Protect her.
And right now, he’d better run or fly off some of his restlessness. He was here to work. To sort out the mess of Connor Inc. He might not need as much sleep as a mortal, but he did need his wits about him in the morning. He just hoped he’d have them all intact.
Laura Fox dropped a tea bag into a mug and poured on boiling water. She was thirsty, very thirsty in fact. She hadn’t meant to fall asleep—after all, she was paid to watch Mr. Connor and take care of anything he needed—but doze off she had and as a result felt strangely energized and relaxed. Maybe power naps were as helpful as some people claimed. On the other hand, did power naps usually involve wildly erotic dreams about employers? Not that she’d complain. Mr. Toby Wise was pretty much the substance of dreams. Tall, good looking, with a Brit accent smooth enough to melt butter and darned considerate and courteous to boot.
Too damn bad she was committed to poking, prying and investigating him. Why the hell had she ever agreed?
Restored by Laura’s unwitting gift, Toby was more than ready to face the morning. Things were going well. The irregular goings-on at Connor Inc. were either dismantled or disposed of. He’d done what Elizabeth Connor Kyd had asked of him, and had the pleasure of living once again on his native soil.
He looked up as the door opened. “The Feds are here?” he asked his secretary. He’d been expecting them but it didn’t mean he had to welcome them.
“Yes, Mr. Wise.” Sarah Wallace, the middle-aged and wonderfully efficient assistant he’d inherited with the rest of Connor Inc., twitched the corner of her mouth. “I can always stall them.”
Not much point, really. He shrugged and grinned. “Send in the clowns!”
She permitted herself a smile. “Would you like an urgent transatlantic call in a few minutes?”
He would like a good chin wag with Tom Kyd about this but might as well find out what they wanted, or rather, knew. “Let’s hear them out first. But how about you stay and take notes.”
“Good idea, Mr. Wise. A witness never hurts, but say as little as possible without a lawyer present.”
Good advice. Ms. Wallace was a godsend. As she swiveled on her sensible one-inch heels, he stopped her. “Just a sec. Have they ever been here before?”
Before he’d taken on the running of Connor Inc., he meant, and she understood. “There was one occasion, while Mr. Radcliffe was here.”
“What happened?”
“They stayed about ten minutes, left, and never came back….”
They probably were lucky to get out alive and without brain damage, given Laran’s monstrous, unethical and hideous methods. If vampires had blood pressure, Toby’s would be mounting, but as it was…“Let’s hope this visit will be as brief.” With Sarah present, he couldn’t use mind control. He should have thought of that before he asked her to stay but…
There were two of them.
He really noticed only one. The younger, shorter, dark-skinned and very definitely female one: Agent Healy, whose slim navy skirt rose enticingly up her legs as she sat in the chair Sarah drew up for her. “Grace Healy” read the little rectangle of card on his desk. The other, Agent Randall Bright, looked anything but bright, but Toby had been around long enough not to let appearances deceive him. Bright was older, with a generous paunch, a florid complexion and large, strong hands.
Foolish mortal! He actually had the nerve to try the hard-squeeze handshake. Toby resisted the temptation to crush a few metatarsals but met grasp with grip, looking Agent Bright in the eye as he smiled and closed his fingers over the man’s hand. “To what do I owe the honor of this visit?”
“You replaced Mr. Radcliffe?” Bright asked as he retrieved his slightly compressed hand.
“I did.” A brief smile and look of helpful interest seemed in order here.
“You wouldn’t know where we could locate him?” Agent Healy asked.
He would. The incinerated remains of Laran Radcliffe were in London—at the bottom of the Serpentine, or was it the Regents Canal? Never mind. She wanted an answer. “He was in England in March. He called Mr. Connor from somewhere in Devon and hasn’t been heard of since.”
He wouldn’t have believed it either. Bright snorted. Healy just raised a perfectly plucked eyebrow. “Nothing?”
“Not a dicky bird!” Too late he remembered “dicky” might offend. It wasn’t always easy communicating in his native land. Mind you, things had changed a bit since 1865. The fact that Grace Healy was an FBI agent rather underscored the fact. Back then, she’d have been picking cotton or, if very fortunate, gracing her owner’s mattress.
“What about his pay? Bank accounts? 401(k)? He just left all that?”
“Yes. Since we have no record of a next of kin, we set up an escrow account, in case he reappears.”
“You think that likely?” Bright asked.
“To be honest, no.” Not unless ashes could reanimate.
“What makes you so sure, Mr. Wise?”
Toby turned to Agent Healy. “Because two members of my colony witnessed a witch destroy him” might be pushing credibility a trifle. “Because of the tangle he left behind him.”
They obviously hadn’t expected him to admit the existence of irregularities quite this early in the conversation. It was most likely a big mistake. But he’d just made it. Toby leaned back, letting his leather chair rock slightly. “When Laran Radcliffe departed, disappeared, absconded, or whatever, Mr. Connor’s daughter, Elizabeth, hired me to sort things out.”
“And you found…?”
Toby made himself look at her but forbade himself to smile. “I’m not in a position to share details of company finances at this point.” Not until he made damn sure Elizabeth’s father was in the clear.
Agent Bright leaned over his paunch. “We could subpoena financial records.”
“Yes, you could.” And would have already if they had enough proof. “Hardly necessary since Connor Inc. is willing to cooperate.” Toby smiled. Neither smiled back. “The financial records are in a pig’s ear of a mess. We’re in the middle of an internal audit. Once that’s completed…”
“You’ll cooperate?” Agent Healy asked.
“Madam,” Toby eyed the warm-coffee skin on the slim neck that rose out of the silk blouse. The scent of human flesh promised warm, rich blood. “I am cooperating—as far as I can in the circumstances. In a few weeks we should know the extent of the goings-on.” After the auditors went over the sanitized accounts. It had taken Kit, Dixie and himself the better part of four days and no sleep to go over every computer in the company. The FBI agents were welcome to dig and delve to their mortal hearts’ content. There was nothing to find.
“Meanwhile, perhaps we should speak to Mr. Connor.” Agent Healy leaned forward.
Good luck to them! “You are aware he had a serious stroke.”
“So it has been reported.”
They doubted? Surely they’d checked hospital records. He shrugged. “I can only reiterate our willingness to cooperate and repeat what I said in my correspondence: Radcliffe’s actions were totally unauthorized. Leave a list of what you want, and after I talk to our lawyers…”
“We’d rather talk to Mr. Connor.”
Toby restrained the scowl. Attractive or not, the woman was as persistent as a rooster on a hen—wrong simile, but accurate. “If you feel it necessary, by all means call his medical team and arrange a convenient time. But I warn you, he is in no physical or mental condition to answer questions. His inability to run the company was the reason Ms. Connor brought me in.”
The both stood up. Exact timing perhaps, or did G-men and-women have secret communication?
“We’ll be back in touch, Mr. Wise,” Bright said and nodded to Agent Healy to leave.
As the door closed behind them, Toby turned to Ms. Wallace. “What did you make of that?”
“Odd,” she replied. “I think they came to intimidate and get you sweating, and you played it cool. Congratulations!”
No matter what they did, they’d never get him sweating, but he wasn’t sure congratulations were in order.
Toby drove back to the house on Devil’s Elbow faster than was judicious on the twisting road, but an odd urgency propelled him: a niggling suspicion that those two FBI agents would arrive at the house and badger Piet Connor. Not that it would do them any good, and it might just prove his point that the man was way beyond answering their questions. On a good day Piet recognized his nurses and Toby. On a bad day…Toby shook his head. He had only Elizabeth’s word for the vital, intelligent and driven man her father had been before blind ambition and lust for power led him to ally himself with a renegade vampire who’d zapped his mind.
Toby had promised Elizabeth to look after her father and unravel the tangled mess of Connor Inc.
So far he’d dismantled the money laundering. It had necessitated closures and redundancies, but they had been needed to sever the links of Laran’s nasty enterprise. And now…Toby turned into the drive that led up to the Connors’ clifftop house. This part of the country was so different from his native South Carolina—and he relished the difference. Even after almost a century and a half, memories of slavery still had him shuddering.
He eased the car to a stop before the automatic garage doors and pulled inside. Making himself walk at mortal speed, he strode through the house to where Piet Connor sat huddled in a wheelchair in the glazed-in porch. The man spent hours just watching the ocean.
“Hello, Piet,” Toby said, bending down to be eye-to-eye with his shriveled body.
A faltering smile followed the light of recognition. “Hello, Toby. Is my Lizzie coming?”
“Soon,” Toby replied. She’d promised to fly over for a week at the end of the month. He’d be darn glad to see her—and Tom. Tom Kyd had proved his friendship once again by fixing computer records and helping sort out the mess that had once been a thriving multinational conglomerate.
“I miss Lizzie,” Piet Connor muttered. “Must say I’m sorry. Didn’t mean…” A tear trickled down his cheek as his voice faltered.
Toby wiped away the tear with the pad of his thumb. “Never mind, Piet. She understands.” More than the old man would ever realize.
He turned to the nurse in the pastel blue uniform who hovered a few feet way. “Difficult day, Nurse Redding?”
“No more than most,” she replied. “Will you sit with him while I fix his dinner?”
“Of course.”
“Sure I can’t fix you anything?”
“Thank you. I’ll get something later.” Having plenty of staff did make Piet’s care easier, but it seemed they’d all taken on the mission of trying to feed Toby as well. Thank Abel, none of them lived in, or they’d soon notice his nonstandard eating habits.
As Nurse Redding walked out and toward the kitchen, Toby moved Piet’s wheelchair closer to the French windows and pulled up a chair beside him. Together they watched the last traces of sunset fade into evening, Piet saying nothing, just grasping Toby’s hand, like a child scared of getting lost. Toby glanced sideways at Piet. Maybe he should have invited the FBI here and let them see once and for all that Piet Connor was no longer responsible for Connor Inc. or much else in this world. But there was the risk that the visit would distress him. When Elizabeth came over, they’d have to talk this out. Heck, he might as well call her now, except—he glanced at his watch—London was eight hours ahead. Tom would be home from hunting by now, and they’d be unlikely to welcome interruption just to talk. He’d call later.
Meanwhile, he should ponder the ramifications of today’s visit. What exactly did the FBI know, or suspect, about Laran Radcliffe’s activities? If they had any notion of the full extent, they’d have arrived with subpoenas, and search and arrest warrants—not that it would have done them much good. Seemed they had suspicions but no proof. It was his job to ensure that no possible proof remained. Laran was history, his activities over and done with for good. Connor Inc. was once more a legitimate business, and he, Toby Wise, was going to see to it.
“Dinner’s ready, Mr. Connor!”
How the woman stayed so cheerful intrigued Toby, but mortals were different, and cheerful was better than dour. “Why not bring it out here, Nurse? I’ll feed him and you can leave. He’ll be fine.”
She hesitated. She’d balk totally if she knew she was leaving her frail patient in the hands of a vampire. Toby smiled. “Honestly. We’ll be alright. Piet likes listening to the ocean. I’ll feed him, and Nurse Fox will be here in an hour or so and she’ll ready him for bed.”
She hesitated just long enough to satisfy her professional scruples. With three school-age children at home, she more than welcomed getting off early. “If you’re sure it’s okay. It really would help, and Nurse Fox is always punctual. I’ve warmed up some nice soup, and there’s the vanilla pudding Nurse Watson made yesterday.”
A few minutes later, the sound of her Toyota faded in the evening air as she drove down the drive toward the main road, and Toby eased his hand from Piet’s and reached for the tray she’d left on the table. He had a strong suspicion that steak and onions or a nice roast chicken was a better choice for a man’s dinner than soup and vanilla pap, but since he’d been a blacksmith, not a cook, in his mortal days, it would have to do.
It was sad to see a once-strong man dribble his dinner down his chin. The damage that blasted Laran had caused! Yes, he’d received his comeuppance at Elizabeth’s hands, but the harm he’d wrought still lingered. “What made you ally yourself with him, old man?” Toby whispered as he spooned up the pale yellow pudding. “Was it just lust for power, or did he gain sway by force of will?” It was doubtful they’d ever know.
And right now, he, Toby, had better press his energies to deflecting the damn FBI, and bury the riddles of the past. Laran’s origins and final motives were a mystery. A lone vampire was an anomaly in Toby’s experience. They tended to hang together for support.
Supper over, Toby left the tray in the kitchen and turned to rejoin Piet on the terrace when his mobile rang.
“Toby? I’m sorry to bother you. It’s Adela.” Piet’s ex-wife and Elizabeth’s stepmother. “I’m having a bit of trouble.”
Indeed. She was house swapping with another witch somewhere near Dark Falls, on the Umpaqua River. She had helped out with Piet, that Toby granted, but he preserved intact his instinctive unease about witches. Elizabeth had proved her honor and her loyalty to the coven; Adela was another matter entirely. “What can I do for you, Adela?”
“Things here are a bit awkward…. I need to get away for a few days until everything calms down.” She sounded scared, definitely out of character for a mortal who’d faced down Vlad Tepes.
“What happened?”
Her hesitation no doubt underscored her reluctance to ask help from a vampire. “It’s the people here,” she replied at last. “Gertrude did mention difficulty, but honestly, I’ve never in my life encountered anything on this scale. First it was flower pots smashed and a rosebush hacked down. Then it was nasty notes on the front door blaming me for dead farm animals. As if I’d go around ripping the throats out of sheep and cows. Ridiculous!” Yes, but frightening too—at least to a lone female mortal in an unfamiliar place. “This was supposed to be a quiet summer and it’s turning out vile. I could take the mutterings, the nasty notes and the crossing fingers behind my back, but this afternoon…” Her voice tightened in terror. This was not the woman he knew.
“What happened, Adela?”
“I know I’m probably overreacting, but this morning I found all four tires slashed. I’ve called both service stations in the place and none have replacements. That alone wouldn’t have bothered me so much—hell, it’s a small town and I doubt they get much call for Italian import tires—but this afternoon I found a note under a rock on the back step: ‘Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.’ Quite honestly, Toby, I’m scared.”
He didn’t blame her. She had to be at her wits’ end to apply to a vampire for succor. “The night nurse is due in half an hour or so. I’ll come over as soon as she arrives. You can stay here.” He just hoped it wouldn’t be for long. But a witch hunt in this day and age? Ridiculous!
The minute Laura Fox arrived, Toby was out the door and heading his red Mercedes toward Dark Falls.
It was heavy dusk by the time Toby reached the outskirts of the small town. Quiet and peaceful, a knot of tourists sitting out on the front porch of the Kountry Kitchen, the town looked like something out of a tourist brochure, until he drove through the town and saw Adela’s vandalized car parked beside the little house. She hadn’t told the half of it: The slashed tires were just the beginning. The windshield had been smashed and some noxious substance poured all over the bonnet. Someone wanted Adela grounded.
As he parked and walked over to inspect the damage, Toby glimpsed a shadow at the window and a flicker of a curtain. He didn’t blame her being cautious. Down at the end of a dirt road, a good hundred meters or more from the nearest neighbor, she should have been safe and unbothered. Instead…
“Toby?” She called from the half-open door. “Thank the goddess!”
At the panic in her voice, he crossed the front lawn in seconds and was inside the house, pulling the door closed behind him. “I’m here and you’re going to be gone in a jiffy.” The change in her was shocking. Gone was the confident, almost defiant woman he’d met a month or so earlier.
She backed away from him and slumped down on a chair. “I feel foolish calling you like an idiot, but afterward, I was so glad I did. This last thing freaked me out.”
“The car being vandalized? I saw what they’d done. Tires was just the beginning.”
She shook her head. “No, worse than that. I almost upchucked when I saw it on the back porch.” She looked pale enough to do just that, right here and now.
“What the hell happened, Adela?” Witch she might be, but she was a terrified woman and needed help.
She shook her head. “Just fifteen minutes ago. I went out to fill up the bird feeders before I left and…” She swallowed, and a shudder shook her shoulders. “It was horrible, and heck, they think I’m doing that sort of thing!”
“Doing what, Adela?”
She got herself together with effort. “I can’t bear to look at it again. I should have dragged it away and at least buried it but…” She stood up. “Look, I need a cup of tea. Mind waiting while I get one? Then we’ll go.”
Why not? “Go ahead. I’ll have a look at what bothered you so.” Might give him a clue to the perpetrators. Harassing a defenseless woman—perhaps not totally defenseless, but she was alone—was unacceptable in his book. “Out the back, you said?”
She nodded. “On the path below the back porch steps, look…” She met his eyes. “It’s nasty, but I suppose blood doesn’t bother you quite as much as it does me.”
Not usually, but this did. The bloody, mangled remains of a large dog lay on the cracked concrete. It had been dead when dumped. There had been no bleeding, at least no. . .
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