Cora's Secret: A Vampire Ménage Urban Fantasy Romance (4 page)

Read Cora's Secret: A Vampire Ménage Urban Fantasy Romance Online

Authors: Tracy Cooper-Posey

Tags: #mmf series, #elven romance, #urban fantasy romance, #paranormal menage, #vampire romance, #menage a trois romance m f m m

BOOK: Cora's Secret: A Vampire Ménage Urban Fantasy Romance
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Five of them busted on the second card and she collected the cards and the chips. The last three decided to sit on nineteen, twenty and eighteen.

Cora flipped, then flipped again. A ten, which blew her budget. Biting the inside of her cheek, she paid out the sitters, then glanced around for Kruger, the pit boss. Kruger understood the stresses of dealing as he’d come up through the ranks.

“Need a break,” she murmured. “Concentration just slipped.”

“Take five,” he told her. He didn’t protest that she’d just clocked back on a scant hour ago.

“Thanks,” she told him with a smile. “I’m taking a short break,” she announced to the table. “This is Gerald, who will look after you for the next few deals.”

Kruger stepped in behind the kidney-shaped table.

Cora moved down the twelve-foot wide space between tables that made up the main corridor through the casino, heading for the little service corridor and the staff room. She smiled at everyone who caught her gaze, staying friendly and charming despite her heavily beating heart.

“Cora.”

It was Rhys Wisherd’s voice.

Cora turned to face him.

His smile was small and he made no move to close the four feet between them. “You’re on a break?” he asked.

“Five minutes.”

“Pity. I’d offer to buy you a drink, if you had longer.”

This was an old dance. Rhys Wisherd had been threatening to buy her a drink for nearly a year. He’d never come good on the implied promise.

A pair of gamblers moved right through the space between them, oblivious to their conversation. Rhys frowned.

Cora waved him over to the area where all the late-night tables were grouped. They weren’t open yet so there was barely any traffic around them. She leaned back against the padded edge of the closest one. “You look tired,” she told him as he stopped two feet away. Two feet was better than four feet, anyway.

Rhys shook his head. “I had…an interesting conversation, not long ago. It’s bothering me.”

“Some con get under your skin?” she asked, for transporting criminals to and from court was one of the duties he hated the most.

“A traveler passing through.” He shook his head again. “It’s nothing.”

A customer holding one of the freebie drinks from the tables brushed past Rhys, making him look over his shoulder. He stepped closer, out of the traffic path.

Cora’s breath caught. Rhys never got this close, but there was suddenly only a few inches between them. Rhys looked down at her.

He was a tall man, which she liked. She was freakishly tall herself, one of the clichéd long-legged Texas women that they always talked about. Plus she was wearing low heels. But Rhys was taller.

She could smell him. Coffee, aftershave and an underlying scent that had to be his natural one.

As his gaze met hers, Cora swallowed. Her body seemed to go on high alert. The tight hem of the stretch skirt she was wearing rubbed her legs, making her aware of her upper thighs and how much of her legs was on display and the way her hips were outlined by the skirt. The vest was a shaped garment and she wore a low-cut long sleeved tee shirt beneath it so her cleavage wasn’t hidden between the button fronts of the vest. She could feel her breasts in their lace bra cups swell. Her nipples hardened, the lace scratching them.

All she could think of was the almost overwhelming urge to kiss Rhys. She had entertained the idea of kissing him in the past, but never with this degree of compulsion. The need to move, to press herself against him, to feel his heat against her body, was like a tidal force.

Rhys’ eyes narrowed, like they did when he was suspicious. Or puzzled. His lips parted and she heard him draw in a slow breath.

Of all Rhys’ slightly worn features, Cora liked his lips the best. They were full and looked firm. Sometimes she had wondered what they would feel like against hers. What would they taste like? Would he be a good kisser?

That question occurred to her now with even more force. She longed to find out.

She pulled her gaze back up to his eyes. Up close like this, the laugh lines around the corners of his eyes were apparent. So was the very light touch of gray at his temples, but apart from the crinkles at the corners of his eyes, his face was unlined, which meant the gray was premature and probably earned via his high stress job. It added to his slightly imperfect appearance. He wasn’t completely dark-headed, completely young, or perfectly handsome. She guessed his age to be somewhere in his late thirties or early forties.

But he was sexy in a low-key way that a woman looking for a perfect date would miss in her first sweeping glance. It was only after Cora had got to know Rhys Wisherd that she appreciated his better qualities. He had tight hips and an even better ass, that the jeans outlined nicely, but the jacket often hid. She had seen him in rolled-up shirt sleeves only once and knew his forearms were strong with muscle, but he wasn’t muscle-bound. He worked too hard for that.

Everyone liked Sheriff Wisherd. Everyone seemed to know him. Cora had met him the second night on the job, which had been her third day in Erie, and had liked him, too. He visited the casino every few days to check with Jimmy, the manager, and look around for himself. He usually stopped at her table to nod and perhaps speak for a moment in between deals. But she wasn’t the only dealer he chatted with, either. He spread his low-key charm around and didn’t favor anyone in particular.

Now he was almost leaning over her. His lips were inches away. She just had to sway toward him and their mouths would meet.

Do it
. The urge was powerful, swelling up inside her like…god, like an orgasm. It was building inside her chest, instead of her belly, but it was impossible to ignore.

“Rhys…” she breathed.

He was breathing harder. Staring at her. At her lips.

He wanted to kiss her, too.

It was a moment of perfect understanding. She could see he was battling with his better senses, the upright, proper perspective of the city’s most popular sheriff ever.

“Howdy, Sheriff Wisherd!” a man, a stranger, said from behind.

The moment was broken. Rhys stirred and looked over his shoulder. The well-wisher was already five yards away, but Rhys raised his hand in greeting anyway.

Cora straightened up from her lean against the table and took a small step to one side, putting distance between her and Rhys. She flipped her hair back over her shoulders, pulled her vest back into place and tried to shake off the dregs of that single powerful moment.

Rhys turned back to her. He had moved farther away from her, as well. He pushed his hands into his jacket pockets. “I should let you have your break,” he said slowly. She got the impression that his mind was working hard. Perhaps he was wondering what the fuck was going on, too. “Have you seen Jimmy tonight?”

“He’s coming in later. Kruger is holding the fort.”

Rhys swallowed. She could hear it. “Would you let Jimmy know I stopped in?”

“Sure can.” It was one of the peppy phrases she used with customers and it sounded as false as it really was. She bit her lip, wondering how she could take it back. “I mean…of course,” she said, her voice low.

He looked at her.
Really
looked at her. “Sorry to use up your break.”

“I’m off shift at ten.” She could feel her own lips opening in surprise. Why was she telling him that? Had she really just hinted that he should come back?

Rhys took a step backward. “I…ah…gotta go.”

She nodded. She was afraid to speak. Afraid of what might come out of her mouth.

He turned and headed for the doors.

Cora couldn’t help herself. She watched his ass for every step between her and the door. Because his hands were in the pockets of his jacket, the back of the jacket rode up the small of his back and she could watch every flex and bunch of the long thighs and the tight curves above.

In her mind he was naked, the creamy flesh hers to do with as she wished.

Appalled, she made herself walk away, back to her table. Back to work.

* * * * *
 

Rhys drove back to town like Hell’s Hounds were after him, ignoring the speed limits. The cruiser steered itself home, while he tried to figure out what was going on. He had been
that
close to bending Cora even farther over the table and…and…

The images that floated to the front of his mind didn’t help his recovery. His body was tightly coiled, the tension all centered on his aching cock. Even his balls felt like solid lead masses and he eased the jeans out of his crotch, to give his throbbing testicles room.

The images persisted. He could
feel
her skin under his hands. It would be soft. The scent she always wore would be stronger when his mouth hovered just above her breasts….

He groaned and pounded the steering wheel,
making
his thoughts move away from Cora and her long legs and honey-blonde hair and her big brown eyes.

Were her lips as soft as they looked?

Rhys growled, gripping the steering wheel even harder. When he got home he really was going to take a cold shower. What the fuck was wrong with him? It was like he was in high school all over again.

* * * * *
 

Cora tried to pull her concentration back around to the job. She tried very hard and managed to last an hour, but Kruger hovered nearby almost the entire hour, wearing a heavy frown.

By the time seven o’clock rolled around, Cora felt exhausted, something that never happened to her. She glanced at the glass doors and the night beyond. Had she really been waiting to see if Rhys would turn up again? Was she really that addled over a pair of thighs?

Abruptly, she told Kruger she was booking off sick for the rest of the night. He didn’t seem surprised.

She changed into her leathers and slung her backpack over her shoulders and carried her helmet out to her Harley. She sat on it and blew out her breath. The night air was cool. Soon it would be cold enough that for appearances’ sake, she would have to give up the bike for winter and start using the Jeep. But that was a few weeks away yet and the way this summer was lingering, it could be even longer.

She looked around the parking lot. The thing, whatever he was, had gone. She would have been surprised if he had stayed.

Cora stared down at the iridescent black paint work on the gas tank between her thighs as a sense memory of his lips against hers zinged back into her mind, making her heart beat and her lips to part as her breath sped up.

Then she blinked. “Damn it all,” she whispered, then twisted her hair and shoved it down the back of her jacket, then pushed the helmet over her head. She started the bike up and headed out onto the causeway, where she opened up the throttle and let the roar of the wind and the air plucking at her jacket disperse the lingering memory.

By the time she reached her complex, the battering of the wind had muffled her thoughts enough that it was safe to get off the bike and go inside. She tripped the remote and steered the bike into the garage, then parked next to the Jeep while the door closed behind her.

She listened to the tick of the cooling engine and the silence from the rest of the house. Her townhouse shared common walls with neighbors on both sides, but they kept very normal hours and would possibly be in bed by now.

Meta Greet, who lived on the right side, would most definitely be asleep. She was an early bird, up by five a.m. every morning regardless of the day of the week, to fit in her running training before she went to work. The Altmanns, on the other side, were elderly and rarely went out.

“Y’all sleep well,” Cora murmured to herself and went into the house. She put the helmet on one of the hooks by the garage door and stripped off her leathers. It was completely still in the house, which was normal and felt comforting.

She could feel herself relaxing as she walked through the freshly painted butler’s pantry into the kitchen and the living room beyond, with its big bay window with white mullions and lace panels.

Slowly, she walked upstairs, letting her mind rove through the dozen or so projects she currently had in progress. Should she settle into painting? Research fabric and designs for the drapes in the main bedroom? Or finish building the shelving in her walk-in wardrobe? She was still in the middle of stripping down the decades of vinyl wallpaper in the third bedroom, too, but that had a common wall with Meta’s house and scraping and tapping on the wall might wake her.

Any woodworking at all had the potential for making noise. That left painting and on-line research into the other renovations and projects she itched to get to.

The idea of sitting still didn’t appeal to her, even if her mind was completely occupied by pleasant thoughts.

Painting it was, then.

She changed into her paint-splattered overalls and went into the second bedroom, which was filled with drop cloth-covered mounds, ladders and the strong aroma of fresh paint. The dark teal on the walls needed a second coat to achieve the full saturation of color.

She hovered with her hand over the light switch and considered the time. Everyone else was in bed. With a shrug, she left the light off. Silently, she picked up the roller and unwrapped the plastic around it and got to work.

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